Then you would have two pairs of glasses, a spare for trips. That is all my comments.
JCH MD
The RX is really no different, just the execution... same rimless frame, but new bridge, same shape...
The ultimate "fall back" position would be to ask that an exact copy of your old RX be put in your new frames at no charge to you.
JCH MD
Those were my thoughts.
I was told by both the ophthalmologist and the optician that the glasses were right and I was wrong. Both said that OC and PD would not affect the lens, yeah, right.
I was hoping for a citation to be able to show them.
The last optician was not without problems nor the one before that.
It seems as though a prism compounds the problems.
My prescription is minimal, so, I don't "see" all the problems in getting a pair to work right. It always takes two to get one. What a waste and aggravation.
See if you can get your money back and go to the old optician. As we have outlined before there are over a dozen variables in each pair of glasses so even if the RX, and PD are the same they may not feel the same.
Think of it liike this you have a closet full of shoes more or less the same size but each feels differently on your feet.
JCH MD