Tamas EyeCare: $29 for $200 Value Towards Prescription Eyewear or Prescription Sunglasses (85% Off)


Today’s Groupon Calgary Daily Deal of the Day: Tamas EyeCare: $29 for $200 Value Towards Prescription Eyewear or Prescription Sunglasses (85% Off)

Buy now from only $29
Value $200
Discount 85% Off

Highlights

Clients can choose from a wide selection of brand name frames, including Ray-Ban, Tom Ford, and Prada

About This Deal

  • $200 Value Towards Prescription Eyewear or Prescription Sunglasses

This is a limited time offer while quantities last so don’t miss out!

Click here to buy now or for more details about the deal.

Fine Print
Promotional value expires 120 days after purchase. Amount paid never expires. Limit 3 per person. Valid prescription required. Optometrists available on site for most locations, must call ahead or book online for optometrist appointment; subject to availability. Valid only in-store. Not valid for sale items or non-prescription sunglasses. Cannot be combined with any other offer, discount or promotion. Consultation required; non-candidates and other refund requests will be honored before service provided. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.

Tamas EyeCare
https://www.tamaseyecare.com/
112-8 Nolan Hill Boulevard Northwest, Calgary, AB T3R 0X2

Nearsightedness and Farsightedness: Squished Spheres
If you spend a lot of time squinting, it’s likely that you have myopia or hyperopia. Read on to see what’s going on inside nearsighted and farsighted eyes.

As light enters a perfectly round eyeball it passes through a lens called the cornea and gets focused on an area in the back of the eye called the retina, much like a movie projector’s beam hitting a guy standing up in the front row. The retina converts this light into visual information with photosensitive cells called rods and cones—which dispatch the resulting data to the brain, producing a crystal-clear image. But, for a majority of people there’s one hitch: approximately 65% of adults possess misshapen eyeballs that skew the way light hits the retina, resulting in vision problems.

In the case of nearsightedness, or myopia, the eye takes on an oblong shape, causing incoming light rays to meet—and thus focus—at a point just shy of the retina. By the time the rays have actually reached the retina, they’ve begun to diverge again. The farther away the object reflecting light is from the eye, the more pronounced this effect will be, resulting in blurry vision at a distance. In farsighted eyes, it’s just the opposite: the light isn’t focused yet when it reaches the retina (consider a movie projector positioned too close to the screen), although the blurring this produces is less noticeable at greater distances.

These very common conditions have filled medical logs for 2,000 years, before which time everything was bigger so it didn’t matter as much. It wasn’t until the advent of corrective lenses in the 16th century, however, that anyone was able to do anything about it. For nearsighted eyes, convex lenses filter light through a surface that’s thinner at the center than at the edges, giving light rays an extra boost so they can converge on the retina for a clear, clean image. Lenses for the farsighted are thicker at the center, bending the light so that it, too, lands right where it should.

Click here to buy now or for more information about the deal. Don’t miss out!