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Some Celebs That Are Defined By Their Glasses


Glasses can make the man (or woman!). In the last ten years so so Designer brands like Lacoste and Prada have really stamped their authority in the designer glasses market. The fact is it’s very often the other way around.  Sophia Loren, who now has her own range of designer glasses bearing her name, was once more associated with Foster Grant,   at least for sunglasses.  She featured in the “Who’s That Behind Those Foster Grants?”  advertising campaign (voted among the best 100 campaigns ever) along with Raquel Welch and Mia Farrow

 

In comedy, you only have to look as far as the two Ronnies.  Messer’s Corbett and Barker flaunted their horn rims, and indeed the glasses were all the logo the show needed. Comedians like Harry Hill would not have the same appeal if his peepers weren’t hidden behind a thick pair of his trade mark specs. Sadly, I never knew my real ladder.” without them?

 

Surely the most cringingly corporate, sickeningly sycophantic  and ultimately naff  use of designer glasses was  when Steve Wozniak, then of Apple Computers, went so far as to have Apple -shaped glasses made for him. The Apple boss Steve Jobs clearly didn’t think much of them.  Some celebrity designer sunglasses are not intended to boost ego and effect, but to improve performance.   The best example of this must be  snooker player Dennis Taylor’s famous glasses which were designed by Jack Karnehm, better known as BBC TV’s snooker commentator from 1978 to 1993. Having served a five-year spectacle-making apprenticeship, he developed Taylor’s distinctive, swivel-lens, upside-down design.  Those designer glasses helped Taylor win the 1985 world snooker title and made him seem almost exotic into the bargain!

 

But perhaps the most unusual celebrity Oakley glasses wearer was Eric Sykes.  A comedy genius and excellent writer, Sykes was never seen without his black horn rims. But that was because he became suddenly deaf without warning as an adult.  The glasses he wore contained no lenses at all  and were actually a bone-conducting hearing aid.




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