Accession No
0760
Brief Description
spectacles, railway, 1850 (c)
Origin
Maker
Class
optical
Earliest Date
1850
Latest Date
1850
Inscription Date
Material
organic (tortoise shell); metal (silver); glass
Dimensions
length 123mm; breadth 40mm
Special Collection
Robert Whipple collection
Provenance
Purchased from Lea Brown, Edinburgh, Scotland, on 12/09/1934.
Inscription
Description Notes
Tortoise shell with silver pivoted side-pieces. D shaped lenses with light blue glass (0760.1 and 0760.2) and D shaped side lenses hinged along straight edge.
Complete.
References
Events
Description
Spectacles
Usually consisting of a pair of lenses held in a frame, spectacles may have originated in the ancient civilizations of China and the Mediterranean, but early forms were crude. It was only in the 18th century that the grinding of lenses became sufficiently advanced to make them really effective for correcting sight defects. In order to correct for near sightedness, the lenses must be concave, which diverges the rays of light (angles them apart), and for long sightedness they must be convex, to angle the rays of light together.
Spectacles are not solely used for defective eyesight; the Inuit and the Yupik use wooden spectacles with very small slits in them to reduce the glare from snow and ice.
FM:42571
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