I started wearing spectacles at the age of 8-years old while still in primary school, and it was a tough thing to cope with at the time. Children can unwittingly be very cruel. Not many days went by without some name calling. The usual, four-eyes, specky, specky four-eyes and so on. Thankfully, it stopped when I got a pair of National Heath glasses that looked like those worn by a children’s TV character, Joe 90. Suddenly wearing glasses was cool. I recall years later walking the streets of Selkirk, where my family lived at the time and being addressed as Joe by a fellow classmate.
Anyway, in all that time I always tried to keep my glasses clean, trying all manner of methods including the expensive stuff you buy in the opticians but none of them were particularly effective. However, today, some 50 years later, I want to share my own method with you. To start off you need an empty plastic bottle – I use an empty gel hand-wash container, an empty eye drop bottle is also ideal. Fill it with clean tap water and add no more than a couple of drops of cheap washing up liquid. Give it a light shake to mix thoroughly.
To clean your glasses, start by rinsing them first under the tap to remove any loose material from the lenses. You can use warm or cold water, probably best to avoid very hot water. Do not touch the lenses with your fingers at this stage. Then add a small puddle of your cleaning mix from the bottle to each side of your lenses and very gently, with minimal or almost no pressure, spread all over the lens with a clean uncalloused finger. Next, rinse each lens under the tap for a few minutes making sure to cover all parts of the lens. From now on avoid touching the lenses with your fingers, this will leave marks.
The last stage is to hold the lenses vertically and slowly run them through a gentle stream of warm or cold water from the tap. Move backwards and forwards slowly a couple of times, if needed. Capillary attraction from the water stream will remove most of the water droplets from the lens surface which means you don’t have to dry them off with anything that might scratch them. Gently tapping the lower edge of the glasses on your palm should dislodge any remaining stubborn water droplets. Finally, dry your hands if wet and use a soft hand towel to carefully dab any remaining droplets from the frames and legs.
You should now have crystal clear lenses, if not, give it another try. Really manky glasses may take a few tries. I recall cleaning a relative’s glasses once, they hadn’t been cleaned in years, decades even. He almost fell off his seat when I handed them back to him, so used he was to peering through a blurry out of focus smear. They didn’t stay clean for very long.
I checked with an optician if this was a safe method and they confirmed it was. I was initially concerned about the washing up liquid removing any lens coatings but it takes much stronger stuff to do that, acetone, I think was mentioned. And the best thing is, this method costs nothing! Note that this method seems to work better with coated lenses with those without coatings.
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