Archive for July, 2010

Oliver Peoples: The Dream & Vision Our Birth

July 20th, 2010

Oliver Peoples was established in 1986 by Larry and Dennis Leight in West Hollywood, CA and first appeared on the cover of German Vogue in 1987. They began selling vintage frames from a boutique and now includes a number of brands, including Oliver Peoples Vision, Mosley Tribes and Paul Smith Spectacles. In addition to being sold in Oliver Peoples retail outlets, the glasses can be found at Neiman Marcus, Barneys New York, Nordstrom and Bloomingdale’s.

In the following video Oliver Peoples co-founder and Creative Director Larry Leight talks about the history of the company and product.

oliverpeoples.com

2010 Most Influential Women in Optical: 40 Women with Vision for the Future

July 19th, 2010

Vision Monday’s eighth annual special report, tells the success stories of women in optical as they continue to take on leadership roles in companies via R&D, design, marketing, sales and educational institutions. This year, readers were asked to nominate honorees in four key categories: Executive Suite, Mentors, Innovators and Rising Stars.

Vision Monday also marks its fifth annual salute to the Next Generation of Leadership with profiles on the best and the brightest from top optometry and opticianry schools in the U.S.

Click here to view Optical’s Most Influential Women 2010

visionmonday.com

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Dreaming of a World Without Breast Cancer

July 19th, 2010

Carrying the inspirational name Dream, these new sunglasses are dramatic and oversized and feature a sophisticated shape. Dream is available in two colors: Black and Wine. One of the design’s most captivating features is the metal BCBGMAXAZRIA icon brilliantly displayed at the temples. Inside the sunglasses is a beautiful silk-screened pattern of pink ribbons and inspirational words, elegantly symbolizing support for breast cancer research and awareness.

Dream carries a suggested retail price that consumers will love: $99.99. This retail-friendly pricing will make this stunning sunglass all the more attractive to the consumer, appealing to both their hearts and their pocketbooks.

Twenty-five percent of retail sales from each pair of Dream sunglasses will be donated to Susan G. Komen for the Cure, with a guaranteed minimum donation of $100,000.

To order Dream, visit cvoptical.com and click on the “Dream” button or call 800.645.3733.

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FDA Approves First Implantable Miniature Telescope to Improve Sight of AMD Patients

July 19th, 2010

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced it has approved the Implantable Miniature Telescope (IMT) to improve vision in some patients with end-stage age-related macular degeneration (AMD).

Surgically implanted in one eye, the IMT is a small telescope that replaces the natural lens and provides an image that has been magnified more than two times.

AMD, a condition that mainly affects older people, damages the center of the retina (macula) and results in a loss of vision in the center of the visual field. About 8 million people in the United States have AMD and nearly 2 million of them already have significant vision loss, according to the National Eye Institute. AMD can make it difficult or impossible to recognize faces or perform daily tasks such as reading or watching television.

“This innovation has the potential to provide many people with an improved quality of life,” said Jeffrey Shuren, M.D., J.D., director of the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health.

The IMT is available in two models: one that provides 2.2 times magnification and another 2.7 times magnification. The IMT is designed to magnify and project images onto a healthy portion of the retina. The IMT is intended to be implanted in only one eye; the non-implanted eye is used for peripheral vision.

The IMT is used in patients ages 75 years and older with stable severe to profound vision impairment (when vision impairment has not changed over time) caused by blind spots (bilateral central scotoma) associated with end-stage AMD. These patients also have evidence of a visually significant cataract.

Patients agree to undergo training with an external telescope with a low vision specialist prior to implantation to determine whether adequate improvement in vision with the external telescope can be obtained and to verify if the patient has adequate peripheral vision in the eye that would not be implanted. Patients also agree to participate in a post-operative visual training program.

In a 219-patient, multi-center clinical study of the IMT, 90 percent of patients achieved at least a 2-line gain in either their distance or best-corrected visual acuity, and 75 percent of patients improved their level of vision from severe or profound impairment to moderate impairment.

Because the IMT is a large device, implantation can lead to extensive loss of corneal endothelial cells (ECD), the layer of cells essential for maintaining the clarity of the cornea, and chronic endothelial cell loss. The chronic rate of endothelial cell loss is about 5 percent per year. Significant losses in ECD may lead to corneal edema, corneal decompensation, and the need for corneal transplant. In the study, 10 eyes had unresolved corneal edema, with five resulting in corneal transplants. The calculated five-year risk for unresolved corneal edema, corneal decompensation, and corneal transplant are 9.2 percent, 6.8 percent and 4.1 percent, respectively.

To ensure that the risks of IMT implantation are sufficiently and consistently communicated to patients, the FDA and the manufacturer created detailed labeling, including an Acceptance of Risk and Informed Decision Agreement, which patients must complete prior to IMT implantation. The agreement provides a guide for patients and their physicians to discuss the risks associated with IMT implantation. Patients should be given adequate time to review all of the information regarding the IMT.

As a condition of FDA approval, the manufacturer, VisionCare Ophthalmic Technologies Inc. of Saratoga, Calif., must conduct two post-approval studies. In one study, VisionCare must continue follow-up on the subjects from its long-term follow-up cohort for an additional two years. Another study of 770 newly enrolled subjects will include an evaluation of the endothelial cell density and related adverse events for five years after implantation.

U.S. Food and Drug Administration

CLICK BUZ: Revolutionary Design for Children’s Eyewear

July 16th, 2010

CLICK BUZ is like nothing else the market has ever seen. Its revolutionary design incorporates a great deal of highly sophisticated eyewear technology. One of the foremost features of the product is the way the rim adapts to the shape of the lens. This enables the optician to create glasses that perfectly suit the shape of the child’s face. Interchangeable components means it’s easy to replace parts when worn or broken, or as the child outgrows them.

Technically, one of the most important elements is the locking pin situated inside the rim that keeps the lens stable irregardless of what style is chosen. The lens will always be perfectly aligned thanks to a special anti-twist mechanism.

Special NYLON PA12 screws, patented by Joint Project exclusively for the BUZ range, are used to assemble the parts, ensuring the utmost safety and excellent stress-resistance. BUZ can be made to fit any size by adjusting the temples to the desired length, adapting the thermoplast temple tips, straight or curled, and selecting one of two available bridge designs.

Children really enjoy creating their own glasses – they’re bright, colorful and as changeable as a chameleon, in a choice of different shapes, round, oval, square or pantoscopic, and nose pads.

jointproject.it

Wiley X Generates Nationwide Support For The Breast Cancer Research Foundation

July 15th, 2010

Wiley X has been honored to participate in the fight to find a cure for breast cancer and since January, 2010 has been donating $2.50 from the sale of each non-polarized pair and $3.50 from each polarized pair of one of its top- selling women’s sunglasses. The company has committed to raising a minimum of $10,000 by the year’s end for The Breast Cancer Research Foundation (BCRF) from its signature pink Cotton Candy colored frame Lacey glasses, and the momentum of the program has been spreading like wildfire. Every pair of Wiley X Lacey eyewear has a special BCRF Pink Ribbon cling sticker on the lens, and the response of sales through Wiley X’s dealer network has been overwhelming — bringing the heat to this important cause, just in time for summer.

The Breast Cancer Research Foundation is committed to preventing breast cancer and finding a cure in our lifetime by funding clinical and translational research worldwide. A minimum of 85 cents of every dollar raised through the foundation’s efforts goes directly to breast cancer research and awareness programs.

“When we started this program in partnership with BCRF, we were humbly grateful for the chance to play a role in the critical battle against this deadly disease,” says Myles Freeman, Wiley X President of Sales. “The excitement generated about the program thus far is so encouraging, and we look forward to sharing the message of hope and support throughout the rest of the year.”

Model: Lacey | Color: Coral Pink Lens/Cotton Candy Frame

The Wiley X Lacey’s connection to healthy living began before this year’s program with BCRF. The boldly fashionable line is actually certified as Occupational Eye Protection — in fact, Wiley X is the only premium sunglass brand in which every SKU meets stringent ANSI Z87 safety specifications. Thanks to its powerful blend of good looks and unbeatable performance and safety attributes, the Wiley X Lacey is currently one of the best selling of the company’s popular Street Series SKU at top national sporting goods chain stores, optical dealers, and NASCAR race events throughout the country. And now with the partnership between Wiley X and BCRF raising record-breaking awareness, even more women than ever before can support the cause for a cure with style and flair, while sporting some of the most powerful eye protection on the market.

To learn more about the Wiley X Lacey sunglasses, the partnership with BCRF — or the company’s full line of high performance eyewear — visit Wiley X Eyewear at 7800 Patterson Pass Road, Livermore, CA 94550 • Telephone: (800) 776-7842 • Or visit online at www.wileyx.com.

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Essilor Unveils New Varilux Comfort Lenses

July 15th, 2010

Now more than ever, people are transitioning between different fields of vision – near, far and intermediate – quicker, more often and for shorter periods of time. Essilor’s New Varilux Comfort lenses have been modernized to meet these new visual demands.

In July, Essilor will offer New Varilux Comfort lenses to help patients enjoy ease of vision throughout the day in every aspect of modern life. The new lenses will offer quicker access to the reading area, 25 percent wider distance and near vision fields and improved performance for today’s digital devices and activities, such as MP3 players, navigation tools, laptops and netbooks.

Using Essilor’s proprietary Live Optics research and development process as well as Varilux Virtual Reality, Essilor scientists have shortened the progression length and widened the near vision and distance fields by up to 25 percent with reduced astigmatism in the intermediate zone. New Varilux Comfort lenses offer even quicker access to the near vision zone, wider fields for relaxed vision during daily activities and reduced swim.

variluxusa.com

Accessible Luxury: New Consumers Favor Quality and Selection

July 14th, 2010

The demand for luxury and a customer’s desire for pampering haven’t disappeared – it’s shifted. The roller coaster economy of 2009 changed the way that the consumer feels about brands, glitz, luxury and the price they pay for them. And, the eyewear consumer isn’t different.

Offering luxury is still an important part of any optical office, the difference today is a shift to demonstrable quality and selection. More than ever, the brand must deliver on its identity and promise – the consumer demands it. The increased demand for branded products at more attractive price points hasn’t diminished the requirement that the brand delivers on the quality of the brand’s promise. How can you make luxury accessible for your patients and what are the components of luxury that you can merchandise?

Right Time to Add Luxury

Eyewear consumers look to the optician for new opportunities to meet their wants. All around us, trends and patterns are challenging the traditional notions of eye care and eyewear sales. Independent ECPs face pressure from the economy, the Internet and a constantly increasing and sometimes confusing array of product choices. Combine that with a patient that is still generally unknowledgeable about eyewear but has brand interest and some Internet acquired information, and that makes them ready for something new. And, it’s the right time. If you are an independent, there are more of them concentrating their eyecare purchases in your offices.

For the year ending June 2009, Independents did 68% of exams and 51% of the eyewear sales. That’s a capture rate of 75%, up from about 60% for the year ending 2008. A 60% capture rate has been pretty consistent for the last 5 years.

The increase has been attributed in part to the increased use of Managed Vision Care (MVC) and the desire to maximize those benefits from one source, typically the independent ECP where the eye exam took place.

Therefore, as the economy recovers, patients may again begin to look elsewhere if they don’t see the things they want in your office. So, to maintain the capture rate, ensure that luxury is accessible front and center. Patients need to be able to see that you have changed for them and have a reason to stay as the economy changes.

Merchandisable Motivators

Consumers’ values and behaviors have changed requiring optical retailers to take a more magnified look at the price, selection, craftsmanship, MVC suitability and the brands offered. You can learn a lot from those that sell around you; stores within stores – department stores that devote areas to particular brands, the way that eyewear is that accessible luxury – just price that bag or shoe for comparison and the private label opportunity. What should be the “take away’s”.

Know and Manage Price Points

What are your office’s three price ranges for good, better and best? Of course it depends on your demographics and your business/office positioning. But, it requires measurement to know. Why?

2009 taught consumers to understand and demand value in the products that they purchased. When showing lenses and frames, be sure that you have well defined price points with the benefits of each clearly understood by both dispenser and them patient. By being able to show the more valuable benefits and describe the reasons that they cost more, patients/buyers gravitate to the better value. That also may include brands where the manufacturer has also lowered the cost to you in order to appeal to consumer wants. Look carefully for some lower priced, name brands and consider private label products. Those brands give your office the products that meet patient wants.

The pricing sweet spot is determined by many things. It should be a representation of your office and is acceptable to the majority of your customers. Also, it’s usually the price point at which the patient starts to resist on the purchase.

    Look for name brands that are more affordable. Patients seek out brands – be sure to let them know that the ones you carry are more accessible than ever. They shouldn’t assume that they are out of reach.

    Understand the retail price points that affect the behavior of the consumer in your office. Know the budget range of your patients and try to sell up by focusing on features and benefits, but understand a higher price point might be out of their comfort zone. This is also key to effectively working with managed care benefits.

    It is also a key number to know to effectively use managed vision care benefits. Their benefit makes that better pair of eyewear now affordable. Recognize the signs that the purchase was already a stretch.

    Also, eliminate small price differences between frames; patients can’t understand why one frame costs $10 more than another. Instead, have a larger difference in prices and prepare a benefits list that supports the price point shifts. It will be easier for the optician to communicate and the patient will understand the differences too.

    Learn the stretch price point for your office – that will help define a new range of luxury in your search for collections and vendors. Increase the differences between price points. Price points have changed but are not necessarily downward for some patients. In fact, when real quality is paramount, your customer will seek out those brands that make and deliver on that promise. So, identifying and providing an overly large selection of frame offerings in your location’s “sweet spot” does not eliminate the need to give the customers who desire higher end product a compelling selection of options.

    You can’t ignore the patients that wants more. You know them. Be sure that advertising, direct mail and recall is also talking to them.

    Luxury for many customers has changed its identity to mean quality and craftsmanship. It also means having items that are unique and exclusive – that meet the expectations of long-term customers. Be able to describe the details that make this product different. If they have an expectation, you must meet it or they go elsewhere.

    If you add more exclusive lines, all employees must be able to show off the craftsmanship and differences.

    Individuals that have spent $700 to $1,200 for a frame are still part of the market and many are still prepared to buy those frames. Consumers that know what they want and can afford it can be part of your patient base. You must have the product and let them know about it.

    Know your patient base and prepare for them with the right products, even those that may be out of reach for most today.

Craftsmanship

The word quality has many definitions and claiming quality can fall on deaf ears. Craftsmanship is a better word. It conjures a use of special materials, with surfaces that are lustrous, textured or smooth. The joinery, material interfaces that beg to be touched, the way temples butt up against endpieces, and logo placement help do the job of selling a frame.

Though price is often a consideration, it isn’t the definitive deciding factor for many. However, it has become more necessary to justify a higher price with a strong message of quality forcing retailers to look at their inventories with a more critical eye and cull those brands and vendors that are not up to snuff. Look for handmade, unique and different styling. Then ensure that the price reflects its uniqueness and that all opticians in the office know the things that make this crafted eyewear different.

    Be prepared to accurately and specifically describe AND SHOW how one frame is different from another. Be ready to demonstrate the differences.

    Don’t be afraid to add more luxury brands this year. Patients have rebounded from buying cheap since many have been “burned” by poorer quality. Patients want to know that the money spent, is well spent.

    Say ‘I won’t compromise your expectations for great eyewear – this frame exceeds your expectation of great value and the experience you will have with it’.

Brands

A brand is much more than a name or a logo. It identifies the products and/or services of one seller or practitioner, and clearly differentiates them in a meaningful way from the competition. A brand is a set of differentiating promises, which link a business or practice to its customers or patients.

    Brands that become part of your luxury tier represent you – choose them wisely.

    In uncertain times, brands help reassure the patient about their purchase. In fact, if you are able to describe the brand attributes accurately, and patients nod and can repeat them back; it makes the patient feel knowledgeable and more confident about their purchase decision. Consider how you can use each of these positioning descriptions with a patient to confirm that this meets their wants and needs.

    “The perfect accessory to complement a career woman’s many lifestyles”
    - Dana Buchman Vision

    “Parisian elegance, discreet luxury, technical knowledge and only the highest quality materials”
    - Lafont

    “Young, vivacious and glamorous, the everyday fashionista”
    - Vogue Eyewear

    “Reaching back to take a look forward”
    - John Varvatos Eyewear

    “Clean and minimalistic with a sophisticated combination of elegance and engineering”
    - Evatik

    “Bold and assertive, refined style and craftsmanship”
    - Karl Lagerfeld Eyewear

    “Aspirational, Accessible, Modern: Forever 30”
    - Adrienne Vittadini Eyewear

    “Visiting the past for the technology of the future”
    - Lightec Carbon

    High quality, on-trend designs at unprecedented price points”
    - Ogi Eyewear

    “Clean Danish design with an unexpected twist”
    - ProDesign

    Use vendor’s words to help choose the collections that will sell and put their words in your own mouth.

    Private labels have also gained market share. If they represent your office and your brand, they must mimic the trust that the patient has had in you. Be careful though to be sure that the private label brands can co-exist with the other luxury brands carried; differentiate them with innovation so there is a meaningful difference in the value that the patient receives.

Selection and Inventory

The suggestion is deeper, not broader. This means, reduce the number of brands carried and for those that are meaningful – add depth in colors, styles and sizes. That goes for both clear and sun targeted styles. This assures that the patient, tickled by the brand has the right choice. Inventory requires better management so that means getting yourself and the patient focused on the brands that match your office identity. To move into affordable luxury, identify the brands and don’t dabble. Have enough to show that it is a serious (ad)venture. Being better focused on inventory by reducing the number of brands also reduces returns because you can focus on proven sellers.

Most patients want to actually touch and try on frames. Having the right color or style makes the process faster and easier. They can’t get the real frame experience on the Internet. For the luxury patient, it is an important part of the eyewear experience. But, at the same time, Internet pricing and the carryover of ease of purchasing of other online item(s) lures patients.

    Help simplify the purchase process where possible. Your patients have plenty of other things to worry about. No worries for eyewear that is stylish, luxurious, and high quality and is right there to touch and try.

    Always have the best selling styles and brands available for patients to purchase. Consult your reps for this information and write down what they say – hold them to their recommendations. However, it is your judgment that is responsible – take advice but make the decisions for your store that matches targets and customer wants.

    Review your vendors for the category – Best of Frames. Understand the programs that they have that can add to the way that you present yourself to patients.

Managed Vision Care

Maximizing insurance plan allowances and reimbursements has been a major driver in eyewear sales. About half the US population has a MVC plan. Using it pays for the basics and makes the luxury brands even more affordable. Remember, MVC plans are part of the reason that capture rate has increased through the first half of 2009.

    Calculate frame price points with the reimbursements received by the variety of plans accepted. This will help to determine the price range of the luxury category carried. Then look for brands that meet that pricepoint.

Loyalty, Home and Away

Loyalty and forming solid relationships is important, both between the retailer and vendor and the retailer(s) and their staffs and customers. Stick with the vendors with whom you have developed a close relationship. They can help develop a plan for the addition of luxury or the brands that you have been skeptical about adding.

Smaller vendors, with definable differences, can really change your appearance to patients. They add quality, color, texture and style without pushing up their price points.

    Compare what each brand brings – determine gaps in your luxury offerings and add where there is a price, merchandising or craftsmanship opportunity for patients.

    Next, work with your rep to schedule training about the brand, the words to use with men and women (they are different) and role-play for effect. Frames with new material technologies (wood, bone, silver, gold, vintage), hinges (screws, rivets, screwless) or textures (shiny, matte, printed, laminated) should be understood by all. Training received on new technology as a vital component to the success of any new project.

    Don’t forget that collections added require that your staff is trained on how to merchandise and talk about them. Read the manufacturers’ brochures, talk to peers and add the products that meet the changes affecting the practice. Consider products to add AND products to get rid of 3X a year.

Conclusion

Don’t let patients think that opportunity for luxury is out of reach. It’s still an important part of every optical office; the difference today is a shift to demonstrable quality and selection.

Step back and take a more magnified look at the price, selection, craftsmanship, MVC suitability and the brands offered in your office. Use the “take away’s” listed in this course to add collections and product lines that can make the difference in the “best” or “luxury” segment of your business. Your patients want access to luxurious eyewear; help provide it.

by Todd Hasselius, Shamir Optical
2020mag.com

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Budget Eyewear vs. Specsavers: Court Finds Copyright Infringement

July 13th, 2010

A recent Federal Court decision is a good reminder to marketers that they need to be careful when seeking to express the same concepts or ideas found in someone else’s advertising. Although it is possible to copy an idea behind another advertisement, simply changing a few words will not be enough – you need to come up with your own expression of the relevant idea.

On May 1, 2010 Budget Eyewear launched its “See it like it is” advertising campaign which offered to replace broken Specsavers glasses with Budget Eyewear prescription glasses. The campaign included print advertisements and a radio script, and included phrases such as:

“If your Specsavers glasses break (and we’re not saying they will) we’ll replace them with a pair of ours for free”.

“If your Specsavers glasses break – and we’re not saying they will – simply bring them into Budget Eyewear. We’ll replace them with a pair from our own range – free of charge”.

“If your glasses aren’t all they’re cracked up to be, don’t worry, we’ll come to the rescue. For the next two weeks… you can take any Specsavers glasses to your nearest participating Budget Eyewear store and we’ll replace them with a pair from our range – free of charge”.

Specsavers launched its own “fight back” campaign on May 13, 2010. Its print advertisement included the following phrases (the bold words are the same as the equivalent sentences in the Budget advertisements):

If your OPSM glasses happen to break, and we’re not saying they’re going to, we’ll exchange them with a pair from Specsavers with a 2 year guarantee, for free”

If your prescription glasses aren’t what you hoped for, don’t stress – we’re here to help. From Thursday 13th May to Thursday 27th May, take any broken OPSM glasses to your nearest Specsavers store and we’ll give you a pair from our range – for free”.

Budget Eyewear commenced Federal Court proceedings on May 14, 2010, seeking an urgent injunction to stop the use and publication of Specsavers’ advertising campaign. It alleged that the Specsavers print advertisement infringed the copyright in two Budget Eyewear print advertisements and a radio script.

Specsavers admitted that it copied Budget Eyewear’s advertising for its own advertisement. Specsavers had directed its advertising agency to utilise Budget Eyewear’s campaign to create Specsavers’ advertisement. However, it copied the idea of the campaign, not the exact wording. As a general rule, copyright protects the expression of an idea, not the idea itself. Budget Eyewear submitted that Specsavers had attempted to avoid copyright infringement by simply replacing words from Budget Eyewear’s advertisements with synonyms so that the exact words were not used. It argued that these substitutions were only minor departures from the original wording used by Budget Eyewear and were insufficient to avoid a finding of copyright infringement, particularly since it was clear and accepted that Specsavers had used the text of Budget Eyewear’s advertisements to develop its own advertisement.

The Federal Court granted an injunction which stopped Specsavers from further publishing its advertisement (pending the final trial in this matter). Although the Specsavers advertisement was not an exact copy of the Budget Eyewear advertisements, it still adopted the same expression of the ideas in Budget Eyewear’s advertisement where various other means could have been used to express the concept. The Court accepted Budget Eyewear’s contention that “Specsavers could have copied the idea but exercised its own imagination to express that novel concept in new and different language rather than… ‘using a thesaurus’ to substitute a synonym.” Having decided that the Specsavers advertisement took a substantial part of the Budget Eyewear advertisements, the Court was satisfied that there was, at first sight, a strong case of copyright infringement. The Court also noted that its injunction does not preclude Specsavers from creating its own expression of the concept, which, broadly speaking, could be described as the replacement of glasses on a certain basis.

This matter will now proceed to a final hearing unless it is settled out of court by Budget Eyewear and Specsavers.

eyesmart.com.au

Keep Your Eye On The Catch With The Orvis Brook Trout Collection

July 13th, 2010


The Orvis Brook Trout Collection captures the essence of the great outdoors with its rugged masculinity, traditional styling, craftsmanship and quality. Each Orvis optical frame comes with a case sporting the embossed Orvis logo.

Model: Au Sable | Color: Brown | 52-18-135
Metal/Monel combination frame that features a full-rim design and a contemporary eyeshape. This style offers spring hinges and Orvis branded nosepads. Au Sable comes in Brown and Gunmetal.


Model: Yampa | Color: Charcoal | 52-17-135
Handmade acetate frame with a modified rectangle eyeshape. This style features a distinctive color technique, integrated spring hinges, and stainless steel hardware. Yampa comes in Charcoal and Brown.


Model: Shenandoah | Color: Gunmetal | 54-19-145
A semi-rimless pure Titanium frame with a modified rectangle eyeshape. This style features spring hinges, Orvis branded nosepads, and a wood grain texture on the temple tips. A second size is offered for this style to accommodate a larger fit. Shenandoah comes in Gunmetal and Brown.


Model: Adirondack | Color: Black | 51-19-135
Titanium 3-piece compression-mount frame with a modified rectangle eyeshape. This style offers carbon fiber inlaid temples, spring hinges, custom Orvis branded nosepads, and an inlaid Orvis logo on the handmade acetate temples. Adirondack comes in Black and Brown.


mcgeegroup.com