The Roaring Twenties and Eyewear: your guide to glasses in the early 20th Century
Today, we take eyewear a little bit for granted. Endless styles, futuristic technology, and availability to everyone. Glasses are a common commodity, and the world can see better because of it. But for the next few minutes, let us transport you to the 1910s and 1920s, where optometry innovations made glasses mainstream and fashionable. With Downton Abbey releasing this Friday, we thought it was only appropriate to turn the dials on our time machine and learn about optometry of the era, the technology behind eyeglasses at the time, and then style of the age.
While eyeglasses were first mass-produced in the industrial age, the early 1900s brought style to eyewear, making them appear fashionable for the first time ever. Hollywood was a big influence on eyewear. Actors and celebrities took the negative stigma away from glasses, turning them from being a medical corrective device to something more practical and fashionable. For example, famed comedian and actor of the silent film era, Harold Lloyd is often credited for popularizing the “nerd-look” with his iconic, thick-rimmed round frames. F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald were both iconic figures in the 1920s and wore early versions of sunglasses as fashion accessories. In 1929, sunglasses would become more mainstream and effective after the creation of a filter that could polarize sunlight.
Round frames took the main stage of the early 1900s. Aside from the horn-rimmed and thick frames that Harold Lloyd popularized, another, more ancient style made a huge comeback. Pince-nez frames, which were balanced on the bridge of the nose without arms, were originally used by monks and academics in the 13th and 14th Centuries. They were originally composed of two “reading stones” — globs of glass similar to magnifying lenses — with a scissor-like hinge bridging them together. Hundreds of years later, they came back into the limelight with a more modern style. Usually made with metal frames, pince-nez frames of the 1900s were popular with the older, “elite” crowd, and were even worn by the likes of Calvin Coolridge and Theodore Roosevelt.
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