COVID-19 Policy/Procedures – please click here to see our vision care protocols.

alarm-ringing ambulance angle2 archive arrow-down arrow-left arrow-right arrow-up at-sign baby baby2 bag binoculars book-open book2 bookmark2 bubble calendar-check calendar-empty camera2 cart chart-growth check chevron-down chevron-left chevron-right chevron-up circle-minus circle city clapboard-play clipboard-empty clipboard-text clock clock2 cloud-download cloud-windy cloud clubs cog cross crown cube youtube diamond4 diamonds drop-crossed drop2 earth ellipsis envelope-open envelope exclamation eye-dropper eye facebook file-empty fire flag2 flare foursquare gift glasses google graph hammer-wrench heart-pulse heart home instagram joystick lamp layers lifebuoy link linkedin list lock magic-wand map-marker map medal-empty menu microscope minus moon mustache-glasses paper-plane paperclip papers pen pencil pie-chart pinterest plus-circle plus power printer pushpin question rain reading receipt recycle reminder sad shield-check smartphone smile soccer spades speed-medium spotlights star-empty star-half star store sun-glasses sun tag telephone thumbs-down thumbs-up tree tumblr twitter tiktok wechat user users wheelchair write yelp youtube

How Multifocal Lenses Got Their Start

You’ve probably seen bifocal, or even trifocal, lenses before. You may even wear them yourself! But do you know where they got their start?

For most people, a part of getting older means that seeing becomes more difficult, especially when trying to focus on something close up. This age-related vision loss is called presbyopia. Today, there are many ways to correct presbyopia, such as reading glasses, multifocal or progressive lenses. But what did folks do back in the day?

Benjamin Franklin: The Father Of The Bifocal Lens

While it is generally accepted that others probably came up with a similar idea around the same time, most historians credit founding father, Benjamin Franklin, with the invention and popularization of bifocal lenses.

Benjamin Franklin was an inventor, statesman and scholar and was often found reading and studying in his spare time. The story goes that he got so sick of carrying around two pairs of glasses and having to switch between them so frequently that he devised a way to combine them. He simply cut the two lenses and put them together, creating a bifocal lens–a lens with two different optical powers. This allowed him, in one pair of glasses, to have improved distance and near vision, simply by moving his eyes.

Trifocal Lenses Help People See At Three Distances

Unfortunately, bifocal lenses only helped its wearers see close up and far away, but they didn’t help much with intermediate distances. In the 1820s, trifocal lenses–a lens with three different optical powers–were invented to remedy this problem, helping people see at all three distances.

Interestingly enough, John Isaac Hawkins, the man who invented the trifocal lens, is the one who coined the term bifocal lenses and applied it to Benjamin Franklin’s idea, around 40 years later.

Progressive Lenses Provide Seamless Vision

The advent of bifocal and trifocal lenses have helped a lot of people with fading vision have better sight with more convenience. Because the images “jump,” so to speak, when your eyes move between the different lens powers, some people find multifocal lenses bothersome. If you fit into this category, you may want to consider progressive lenses!

[iframe https://www.youtube.com/embed/swDdhHpjkGk?rel=0 620 349]

Progressive lenses provide seamless vision at all distances–no visible lines to show where the near and far segment of the lenses begin and end. Although they can be a bit tough to get used to, many people prefer them as the more modern and stylish option.

You deserve to have good vision at all distances! So come into our office and explore our collection of lenses and frames. Whichever glasses you choose, we’re grateful that you chose our practice!

Thank you for being great patients!

Top image by Flickr user Dennis Yang used under Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike 4.0 license. Image cropped and modified from original.
The content on this blog is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of qualified health providers with questions you may have regarding medical conditions.