I can't see much without my glasses, but when I'm swimming everything is tack sharp underwater. Mind you I haven't tried underwater with my glasses on. Hmm...
I can't see much without my glasses, but when I'm swimming everything is tack sharp underwater. Mind you I haven't tried underwater with my glasses on. Hmm...
...since the blue end of the spectrum is the end that tends to mis-focus (relative to the other colors) thru our eyes --
...but sadly the 60s are over...
I'm going to try an experiment later. It would be easiest with 3D glasses, but sadly the 60s are over. I'm going to take off my glasses and compare my acuity through a red #29, a blue #47, a yellow #8, and a green #58.
I'll report back.
I suspect that my two eyes do not register color in the same way -- and the difference acts like a stereo viewer for those 3D photos of old. Equally plausible is that I'm nuts.
However I would have been lost without my yellow tinted driving glasses, plain lenses as my eyes are about the best bit of me. They made everything much clearer especially the motorway lights at night
The eye is more senesitive to the yellow end of the spectrum, rather than blue, so the yellow glasses at night will make things appear brighter. This reduces eye strain because thigns are easier to see.
And you might accomodate the difference in brightness by dilating the pupils more -- so the effective light entry would be unchanged.
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