Very interesting - but how does it work in practice? If you're shortsighted surely one corrected eye would not be enough for your day to day needs? What about the other eye?
Indeed, the monocle wasn't designed for shortsightness, but for the opposite. I have one dominant eye and one 'lazy'. My dominant has always coped with the other, but lately it's getting a bit burdened especially when looking at for example a blackboard for several hours a day. Therefore, I use it for looking in the distance for a long period like a computer etc. Problem is that I supossedly have a cylinder and that the monocle doesn't stay in the same place so that I can't see properly. I'm hoping to get a non-cylindrical value for the lense so that it can turn with any loss of sight.
Beingt short, I have one good and one bad eye, therefore I only need one glass. (And I've sworn never too wear glasses again, and put in lenses aren't really for me
)
Thanks for the picture shirona33, that's about what I had in mind.
I've made some pictures of what could be possible.