I had my Zenni progessives frame adjusted at Walmart by an optician for free. It turned out to be a very minor adjustment, not out of the ordinary. I asked about the index of the lenses and the optician thought it was also not out of the ordinary. He was impressed by the quality for the price and asked me where I got them.
When I got home, I received-again in a timely manner from California- a pair of sunglasses with blue tinted lenses. As cheap as they were, the quality is high and they are very trendy. I am quite impressed and can't really understand the person who complained that no glasses ordered on the internet were as good as store bought glasses. With both glasses, with my eyes as judges, the prescriptions were spot on. I guess I've been lucky since both from Goggles4u and Zenni, I haven't had any problems. The progressives in a nice semi-rimless frame were just under $50 and the sunglasses were $17.95. The progressives cost 1/5 of my last Lenscrafters Glasses with maximum discounts. I ordered a pair of Zenni $8.00 all inclusive glasses for reading. I will report on them but I now expect them to be fine also. On Apr 13, 7:01 am, frespkr <[email protected]> wrote: > I just received my first pair of Zenni Glasses from California in a > little over two weeks. Not bad since they are progressives. > I ordered before from Goggles4U and overall had a decent experience. > Zenni uses polycarbonate for all their lenses so I preferred the > safety of polycarbonate. > The prescription is fine and I am happy on that score. The frame > quality is good. The frame tilts to the side a little bit and I > haven't been able to adjust it myself due to the memory titanium > bridge. > The tilt is nothing that an optician hasn't in store bought glasses > fixed easily but I may have to have an optician fix it. Does anybody > have any experience asking an optician to adjust internet glasses? > I assume if I am polite enough, it will be free. > The second issue is the thickness of the lenses compared to all the > C39 glasses I got from Goggles4U and my Lenscraft progressives(at 5-6 > times the price). It's not terrible but a bit visible through the semi- > rimless frame. > All in all, for the very low price ($50-60, I don't remember exactly > but the lowest I found for progressives), I'm pretty happy. > > I have a frame in great shape that I would like to get progressive > polycarbonate lenses for but from what I found it would have cost me 3 > times as much for the lenses alone. Does anybody know a place to get > poly progressive lenses put in my own frame for less than $100? > > On Apr 10, 4:58 pm, JH <[email protected]> wrote: > > > I have now one pair of rimless single vision and one pair of rimless > > progressive glasses from Zenni. I received both in a timely manner. > > At one point I ordered a replacement frame (after abusing the other > > ones) and when I placed my order, I heard from Zenni within 24 hours > > questioning my order (I had ordered a different frame than my glasses > > and they had looked at my records). They were right and I got my order > > fixed and received a credit for ordering only frames. > > > I have not had bad service from Zenni. Although interestingly enough, > > when my replacement frames were a bit late it was because of the New > > Years celebrations in China (where my frames were made) I was amused. > > If only we celebrated holidays with such fervor (in the US). --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ Check us out at the oft-updated http://www.glassyeyes.com! You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "GlassyEyes" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/glassyeyes?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
