![]() ![]() Today, it has more than 550 stores all over India. From grannies to girlfriends, customers from almost all age groups trust this brand blindly. Titan as a brand itself has earned great popularity over the years. Easy access to a professional optometrist.Nothing extra, but lasting eyewear! What’s Great: The best part about Lenskart is its balance between quality and pricing. They make the purchasing so convenient that it’ll barely cost you much of your time. Your pick will be delivered right to your doorstep. Lenskart offers easy access to an optometrist for its customers. It is the first eyewear brand to establish itself on online platforms. Recognized as one of the best eyeglasses brands in India today, Lenskart has gained prominence in the eyewear industry since 2010. (My former Strategist colleague Jason Chen wore those same Wison frames - but that’s not why I switched, I swear.)” Leight’s frames are generally durable if taken care of and stylish without being loud - a tradition he apparently took on from his father, Larry Leight, the founder (but no longer owner) of heritage glasses brand Oliver Peoples.1. Says Rotunno, “I chose these because the frames are slightly less rounded around the eyes than your standard Harry Potter glasses, making them just different enough from the other Garrett Leight Wilson frames this creature of habit wore previously. ![]() ![]() Strategist senior editor Anthony Rotunno, who has worn glasses “since the second grade,” says “frames have been an everyday accessory for most of my life - because of this, I’ve always been one to invest in pricier pairs I’m the type to wear the same frame for several years, as opposed to switching it up more frequently.” His most recent: the Garrett Leight Walgroves, which he’s been wearing for almost two years. “The real spot for me is Minzer’s Optical … with cheap and shockingly stylish frames and very cheap lenses - my last pair of frames and lenses ran me under $35,” he says. For even more affordable frames, Adams hops on the train down to Borough Park. “WP is always smooth sailing: They make frames people always compliment, and they’re easy to upgrade and replace (they helped me so fast with that lost-at-sea pair),” he says. Though he says he’s had “bad luck with glasses” (including a pair that “got cracked in half when a door hit me in the face at an ice-cream-truck commissary” and another that “got lost in the ocean when I got hit by an unexpected wave”) he likes that these are especially sturdy and, should he lose them, not too expensive. Goldsmith calls the Coleys a “splashier and more arresting look” than the Bensens.įor a lighter tortoiseshell frame, Lucas Adams, a writer, cartoonist, and editor at NYR Comics, recommends these - also from Warby Parker. His latest pair of Warbys: the Coley frames in crystal (though crystal is no longer available, you can still get the Coleys in blue and brown). “The wide frames helped to balance out my extremely narrow head, and the pattern was pleasingly muted and diverting.” The glasses held up “far better than a product at that price point should,” and Goldsmith says he only replaced them because he had a vision-insurance frames allowance to spend. “I started with the Bensen frames in a wide whiskey-tortoise finish ( link here), which felt like a safe choice for my first foray into eyewear,” says Goldsmith. Doubleday publicist Michael Goldsmith, who has been wearing glasses for the past decade, told us he’s had consistent luck with frames from Warby Parker. ![]()
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