Book an eye test in a Sheffield optician

You should book an eye test with us, as our eye tests are very good. They are good as we allow an hour and make good use of it - taking time to listen to you, understand the visual demands of your life at work rest and play. The hour we allow means we can go though the health of your eyes now - using pictures - and talk about keeping them healthy. We can make sure your understand your spectacle prescription and the options for making use of it to improve your vision, reduce strain/tiredness or increase your enjoyment of activities you love from reading, to tennis, to sewing, to volleyball.

Read our reviews on Google - they back up what we say.

We allow an hour for tests as we strongly believe that the standard 20 minute slot allowed in your average Specsavers, is insufficient. It’s obvious why they only allow that amount of time, as it means more tests can be done and more money can potentially be made. But, it’s not for us. It’s not just big multiples that do such short tests, many independents are very rushed too.

You can book online, call or pop in. When you come, we’ll get you a hot drink from the cafe next door and hopefully you will enjoy your time with us.

Eyeye explained for our Chinese speaking friends

We’ve got a leaflet to help our Chinese speaking friends understand our process … with help from a Harland Works placement student. Going to put on website, so we can ensure people can get most of their interactions with us.

Karl Hallam
Don't call them reading glasses!!!

You can call them reading glasses if you like, but they really are not just reading glasses are they? Such glasses are actually to help you see clearly doing things that are closer to you - so your phone, removing a splinter, wiring a plug, painting your nails, changing a SIM card …. not just reading at all.

My staff are instructed not to call them reading glasses - we use the terms glasses for close work or near work. It’s a losing battle in some senses, as petrol stations sell ready made readers and even eye surgeons use the term - unthinkingly and unhelpfully in some cases, in my opinion.

The reason for needing glasses for close work is most commonly due to presbyopia and/or hyeropia - which are rather unfortunately lumped together into the ambiguous term “long sightedness” - also, banned here, unless explained properly.

We all, if we live long enough, get presbyopia. It’s the process where the lens inside the eye loses flexibility over time and this leads to difficulty focusing for close tasks (usually in 40s) and the classis feeling of the arms being too short. Any glasses that are given for this will make close work clear, but will be blurred when looked through in to the distance eg TV/driving - hence the way people peer over the top of them - sometimes for dramatic effect! These are the ones you can buy in pound shops / petrol stations - everywhere! They have been available to buy in this unregulated manor since 1987 - at the same time as Thatcher got rid of NHS specs and eye tests for all. Many people have taken the opportunity to not have eye exams and just buy those glasses exclusively and then suffer preventable and significant sight loss due to undetected glaucoma.

Hyperopia can be an issue for people of any age - it’s the most common cause for the need for spectacles in young children - uncorrected it can lead to strabismus (squint) and/or amblyopia (lazy eye). It means the eye is relatively too short for the focusing system and so the image arrives behind the retina and depending how much focusing capacity you have can lead to blur at near., or at all distances.

Astigmatism, myopia and asymmetric prescriptions between the eyes can also lead to the need for glasses for close work too. Hence why the long/short sighted terms can be deeply unhelpful in understanding what’s going on with your eyes, when things are not clear or they feel strained.

If you are struggling with close work tasks the solution may be single vision glasses for close work and/or varifocal/progressive lenses and/or contact lenses … this is all presuming any health issues have been ruled out.

So, if you are going to call them reading glasses - then please do so understanding that they are so much more than that.

Karl Hallam