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  • EXTENDED VISION™ READING GLASSES

    Introducing EV Readers: Reading glasses tailor-made to your measurements and designed for the way you need to see.

  • SINGLE VISION READING GLASSES

    Handmade frames in styles by Raen, STATE Optical and L&F paired with custom-made single vision reading lenses.

  • &5 Books  Square.jpg__PID:19665f57-52ec-4d19-837f-77462b32c7da
  • Prescription
    LENSES
  • Now you can get custom-made lenses with premium coatings mounted into your own favorite frames.  Enjoy a better reading glass experience with our collection of Extended Vision™ Reading Lenses.  Or give your favorite prescription glasses a second life with our premium Rx Replacement Lenses.

  • SHOP REPLACEMENT LENSES

  • SHOP OMBRAZ LENSES

  • SHOP EXTENDED VISION™ READING LENSES

  • The Measurement Most People Don't Know They Need

    When you get a new glasses prescription, you probably pay attention to the sphere, cylinder, and axis numbers. Those determine your correction strength. But there's another number that's just as important for how well your glasses work—and most people have never heard of it.

    It's called your pupillary distance, or PD. And if it's wrong, even a perfect prescription can feel terrible.

    What Is Pupillary Distance?

    Your pupillary distance is simply the measurement, in millimeters, between the centers of your two pupils. Most adults have a PD somewhere between 54mm and 74mm, with the average around 63mm.

    This number tells the lab where to position the optical center of each lens—the point where the prescription is most accurate and light passes through without distortion.

    When the optical centers align with your pupils, you see clearly and comfortably. When they don't, problems start.

    What Happens When PD Is Wrong

    If your lenses' optical centers don't match your actual pupil positions, you're essentially looking through the wrong part of the lens. The effects can range from subtle to severe:

    Mild mismatch (1-2mm off):

    • Slight eyestrain after extended wear

    • Minor headaches

    • A vague sense that something isn't quite right


    Moderate mismatch (3-4mm off):
    • Noticeable eyestrain

    • Headaches, especially when reading

    • Difficulty focusing

    • Fatigue when wearing glasses for long periods


    Significant mismatch (5mm+ off):
    • Double vision or ghosting

    • Nausea or dizziness

    • Inability to wear the glasses comfortably

    • Feeling like the prescription is wrong (even when it isn't)


    The higher your prescription, the more sensitive you are to PD errors. Someone with a mild prescription might not notice being 2mm off. Someone with a strong prescription might find it intolerable.

    Why Isn't PD on Your Prescription?

    Here's something that surprises many people: in the United States, eye doctors are not required to include PD on your prescription. Many don't.

    Historically, this was because PD was measured at the optical shop when you ordered glasses—it was considered part of fitting, not prescribing. Some argue it's also because leaving PD off makes it harder for patients to order glasses online.

    Whatever the reason, you have the right to request your PD. If your eye doctor won't provide it, you can measure it yourself or have it measured at an optical shop.

    How to Measure Your Own PD

    If you need to measure your PD at home, here's a reliable method:

  • Stand about 8 inches from a mirror in good lighting

  • Hold a millimeter ruler flat against your brow

  • Close your right eye and align the ruler's zero mark with the center of your left pupil

  • Without moving the ruler, close your left eye and open your right

  • Read the measurement at the center of your right pupil

  • Repeat several times and average your results
  • For even more accuracy, have a friend measure you while you look at something in the distance (this keeps your eyes parallel rather than converging).

    Most adults have a PD between 57mm and 65mm. If you're getting a number outside the 54-74mm range, something's probably off with your measurement.

    Single PD vs. Dual PD

    Some prescriptions list a single PD number (like 63mm), while others list two numbers (like 31/32).

    Single PD is the total distance between your pupils. It's fine for most single-vision lenses.

    Dual PD measures each eye separately from the center of your nose. This accounts for the fact that most people's faces aren't perfectly symmetrical. Dual PD is more precise and is especially important for progressive lenses or strong prescriptions.

    If you only have a single PD, you can convert it to an approximate dual PD by dividing by two (63mm becomes 31.5/31.5). But if precision matters for your prescription, getting an actual dual PD measurement is better.

    Why This Matters for Reading Glasses

    Even non-prescription reading glasses have an optical center. Cheap drugstore readers typically assume an average PD of around 62-64mm.

    If your PD is significantly different from average—say, 58mm or 70mm—you might experience eyestrain with off-the-rack readers that has nothing to do with the magnification power. The optical centers simply aren't where your eyes need them to be.

    This is one reason why custom-fitted reading glasses or properly measured extended vision readers can feel dramatically more comfortable than generic drugstore options, even at the same magnification power.

    The Bottom Line

    Your pupillary distance isn't just a minor fitting detail—it's essential for comfortable, accurate vision. If you've ever felt like your glasses "just aren't right" despite having a correct prescription, PD might be the culprit.

    Know your number. Make sure whoever makes your glasses has it. Your eyes will thank you.


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