I would be interested to know if anyone in this group does this and what their experience / recommendations would be.
A pair of mine of gone to pieces and I've never been too taken with the choice at my opticians so thought I would do a bit of research.
Cheers
Hj
MrB and I have been doing this for a few years. Obviously, we still have our sight tests in the UK, but having sorted a decent photos (I detest being photographed) we can "try on" the frames before buying.
Critical things to know or consider are:
Ensure you have a full precription, in cluding any mid distance requirements, if your eyes are sensitive
Understand properly what size of frame you wear, really meaning the width of your face
Understand your bridge measurement
Understand the leg measurement (Of the frame, not you leg,..... ahem)
Understand your pupillary distance (the distance between the centre of your pupils
If you like sprung hinges. check the frame you choose has them
Upload your latest prescription onto the site, so that it is to hand.
Make a record of all of this, because you'll need it every time you order!
Whilst there are some ridiculously cheap options out there, to an extent you do get what you pay for. If your prescription calls for quite a high correction, it is worthwhile paying for lens upgrades to ensure they are thinner and lighter.
We've had fun prescriptions shades through to frameless titanium, all with varifocals, and some with photocromatic (or whatever they call them lenses).
The company we used are originally Chinese, but their workshops are in the US. They are usually in our hands 10-14 days after ordering, with (thus far!) not customs issues. Shipping is $9.95 for up to several pairs I think our biggest order has been 6 at any one time - posh, casual and sailing, wraparound shades, each. Orders are trackable.
That have an excellent support service, should you have any queries, pre-order or if you have an OSM (Oh s*&^ moment) after hitting the purchase button. If they look at your order and something doesn't quite look right (say the pupillary distance looks a bit odd, based on frame width; just an example), they contact you, rather than just blindly bang out to your order.
As we travel and sail a lot we have, in our time, both donated glasses to King Neptune, which is infuriating, but less infuriating at Chinese prices than UK. It does also mean they can be replaced immediately, by order for delivery to someone in the UK travelling out. So much easier than dealing with the High Street. MrB has done this several times, and as his glasses usually cost £400-500 (frameless titanium, varifocal, thin/light lenses, photochromatic), the savings have been significant, meaning we each have more than one pair of glasses on the go at any given time.
If your prescription is very complex, then you might want to try something very basic to start with to ensure you are content it could work for you.
Can you tell we're fans? If you want to know who we use, please let me know.