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    Where to buy spectacles for kids?

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    • N Offline
      nansk
      last edited by

      My 8yo dd needs specs. Please recommend shops you had a good experience at, W.r.t. price, quality and customer service. Thank you.

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      • N Offline
        nansk
        last edited by

        Hi,

        Thank you for your post. We did get her eyesight checked at the hospital and have a prescription for eyeglasses. I was asking for recommendations to good opticians.

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        • B Offline
          BBEwee
          last edited by

          nansk:
          Hi,

          Thank you for your post. We did get her eyesight checked at the hospital and have a prescription for eyeglasses. I was asking for recommendations to good opticians.


          I guess all optician aware good.I goes to the the shop call \"eye link\"for my dd's glasses,cause it is quite near to my house and every half a year she need to get her eye check .Usually I pay for about $160 for the glasses.
          Maybe you would like to try some shop nearby.

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          • N Offline
            nansk
            last edited by

            Thanks, BBWee. Over the weekend, I also checked the various optician shops in our neighbourhood. One of them has a student promo for $118. I think we will go for it.


            Thanks also for the tip to get her eyes checked every 6 months from now on.

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            • C Offline
              Charityst021
              last edited by

              One of the toughest parts about choosing suitable frames for young children is that their noses are not fully developed, so they don’t have a bridge to prevent plastic frames from sliding down. Metal frames, however, usually are made with adjustable nose pads, so they fit everyone’s bridge.


              Most manufacturers recognize this difficulty with plastic frames and make their bridges to fit small noses.

              Each frame must be evaluated individually to make sure it fits the bridge. If any gaps exist between the bridge of the frame and the bridge of the nose, the weight of the lenses will cause the glasses to slide, no matter how well the frame seems to fit before the lenses are made.

              It is important that the glasses stay in place, because kids tend to look right over the tops of the lenses instead of pushing slipping glasses back up where they belong. Your optician usually is the best judge of whether a frame fits properly.

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              • C Offline
                Charityst021
                last edited by

                Thank for your posting, this post is very helpful for us , again I give you special thanks for post .

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                • N Offline
                  nansk
                  last edited by

                  Charityst021:
                  Thank for your posting, this post is very helpful for us , again I give you special thanks for post .

                  Not sure whom you are thanking and why. I found your post was lifted straight from http://www.allaboutvision.com/buysmart/kidseyewear.htm. If that is not your web site, your post amounts to plaigarism.

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                  • H Offline
                    hquek
                    last edited by

                    I think it’s best to find something convenient and close by. I usually bring my kids to a trusted optician but then things happen (they fight and specs get bent out of shape); and then I end up at an optician closest to my place and where it’s easy to get emergency help. I bought frames from this optician before and thus they kinda know our faces (plus the fact we keep going back for help).


                    Am mulling in fact if I should change my kids’ de facto optician to this nearby one in view of the FREE help they had rendered (push the out of shape back, replaced some broken bits). Never a black face, and they don’t charge (like replacing the nose bits).

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                    • N Offline
                      nansk
                      last edited by

                      hquek:
                      ..they don't charge (like replacing the nose bits).

                      Really?! For my own spectacles, an optician in Raffles Place charged $5 to change the nose pads.

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                      • H Offline
                        hquek
                        last edited by

                        Yes, for real. One particular brand we like, Swiss flex, I will need to bring the broken parts so they can exchange for free. If it’s lost, I will have to pay. That one is very light but very fragile - I went there not less than 5 times in 1.5 years.


                        But if other brands, and can use generic type, they don’t charge. once my kids played until the nose pad metal was very bent; somehow they managed to bring it back to shape. As mentioned, we’re famous in that shop already. Although i still dunno the staffs’ name (my bad).

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