Re: Period Tinted Eyepieces or Sunglasses
I think that's a good point. We generally think of glasses today as an all-day-wear kind of thing, part of the way you look when you go out, so why not be photographed in them? But reading glasses, that one only puts on when reading, aren't something you'd necessarily even take out of your pocket at the photographer's, or might not even take on a trip downtown.
Here's a discussion about gold in general, but gold spectacles in particular, from an 1849 book, A History of the Precious Metals by John Lee Comstock at http://books.google.com/books?id=ddMOAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA174 Note that it's talking only about gold spectacles, which would be a luxury item, and not any of the cheaper kinds of frames which could cost well under a dollar. If his estimates are correct, one in forty Americans owned them, so even more would presumably own the cheaper kind.
Hank Trent
hanktrent@voyager.net
Originally posted by Rob Weaver
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Here's a discussion about gold in general, but gold spectacles in particular, from an 1849 book, A History of the Precious Metals by John Lee Comstock at http://books.google.com/books?id=ddMOAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA174 Note that it's talking only about gold spectacles, which would be a luxury item, and not any of the cheaper kinds of frames which could cost well under a dollar. If his estimates are correct, one in forty Americans owned them, so even more would presumably own the cheaper kind.
Gold spectacle frames are of recent date. These were at first of heavy, and often of clumsy workmanship, and being commonly made to order, they cost twenty or thirty dollars... they are now more elegant in appearance, more comfotable, because less heavy, and less costly, by at least on half, than formerly. The price of this article, as now constructed, is from six to twelve dollars, and the average weight of gold in each is four dollars... Gold spectacles are now quite common. We estimate, therefore, the number who have adopted this ornamental necessity at five hundred thousand individuals, among the twenty millions of our citizens.
hanktrent@voyager.net
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