Saturday, May 2, 2015

SUNGLASSES YOU COULD TRY THIS SUMMER


Summer is that one time of the year, you can wear anything and it will be a trend. Those spaghetti straps and tube tops will make a come-back. Along with crop tops, maxi dresses and the ever so lovely short summer dresses! Girls in heels can give their legs a break and wear flip flops, and same goes for the guys.

Now, the one accessory we can't do without during summer is sunglasses. A pair of sunglasses can add oodles of oomph to your look.

Let’s take a look at the different types of sunglasses you could sport this summer, and look stylish!

AVIATORS
For men, aviators give a very sexy and hot and irresistible pilot look, but on women, aviators give a super sophisticated and posh Hollywood celebrity-ish look.
Aviator sunglasses are a style of sunglasses that were developed by Bausch & Lomb. The original Bausch & Lomb design is now marketed as Ray-Ban Aviators, although other manufacturers also produce aviator style sunglasses. They are characterized by dark, often reflective lenses having an area two or three times the area of the eyeball, and very thin metal frames with double or triple bridge (so-called ″bullet hole″) and bayonet earpieces or flexible cable temples that hook behind the ears. The original design featured G-15 tempered glass lenses, i.e., neutral gray, transmitting 15% of incoming light.

CLUB MASTERS
These sunglasses are a good change from aviators. If you aren’t too confident about carrying aviators, then you should immediately buy yourself a pair of club masters. They are cool, fun and make you look so approachable. And summer is all about fun, right?

WAYFARERS
Last but not the least, the best kind of sunglasses available for summer are wayfarers. There’s this certain inescapable charm about them. No matter what you wear, you can always rock wayfarers. On a bikini. On shorts. On a summer dress. For men? Shorts, crisp white shirt, boat shoes and wayfarers, and you are good to go!!!
Wayfarers were designed in 1952 by American optical designer Raymond Stegeman, who procured dozens of patents for Bausch and Lomb, Ray-Ban's parent company at that time the design was a radically new shape, "a mid-century classic to rival Eames chairs and Cadillac tail fins." According to design critic Stephen Bayley, the "distinctive trapezoidal frame spoke a non-verbal language that hinted at unstable dangerousness, but one nicely tempered by the sturdy arms which, according to the advertising, gave the frames a 'masculine look.'"

Ray Ban Wayfarers, which took advantage of new plastic molding technology, marked the transition between a periods of eyewear made from thin metal frames to an era of plastic eyewear.
Apart from these, you could always try some fun, heart shaped, circle shaped, sunglasses at the beach parties. But that’s that about them. Don’t take to formal places, unless you want to look like a little kid!

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