From top: LUCRETIA from Barton Perreira; PARADIGM Medina from Kenmark Eyewear; ROXY 4005 from Mondottica USA
From left: TED BAKER TWS204 from Tura; ALULU from Maui Jim
MATSUDA M3132 from Matsuda
From left: LIGHTEC 30318L from Morel; LUAN from ic! berlin; C-ZONE 12323 from SD Eyes; NEXT TO THE MOON from Orgreen Optics; BLAKE KUWAHARA 1021 from Blake Kuwahara
From top: CHAMPION Swift from L’Amy America; VERA BRADLEY Sylvie from The McGee Group; BLAKE from Denon Eyewear
From left: FENDI 40102U from Thelios; CORAZON from l.a.Eyeworks; CHLOE 0186S from Kering Eyewear
From top: BLACKFIN Waterville BF1009 from Villa Eyewear; VINCE CAMUTO VO541 from Colors in Optics; COCO SONG Wrong Answer from Poets Eyewear
ANDY WOLF 4616 from Andy Wolf Eyewear
From left: STETSON 387 from Zyloware; TEKA LUXE 4156 from Teka Eyewear
From top: BETSEY JOHNSON Glow Up from ImageWear; BCBGMAXAZRIA Demure from ClearVision Optical; SEAN JOHN 6028 from Allure Eyewear
From left: TORY BURCH 2127U from EssilorLuxottica; SILHOUETTE 1612 from Silhouette; VERONIKA WILDGRUBER Toni from Gramercy Eyewear
Can you feel Spring 2023 making an impact? Perhaps
one of the clearest indications of renewed energy hits via
the excitement of eyewear showtime being hosted in
New York City by a growing array of superb eyewear
purveyors turning up the heat exhibiting their newest specs.
Take a PEEK. We truly believe you’ll love what you see.
Once again, the eye can reveal the body’s secrets. In a recent analysis, Retinal pathological features and proteome signatures of Alzheimer’s disease, published in Acta Neuropathologica, Cedars-Sinai investigators looked at post mortem retinal and brain tissue samples collected over 14 years from 86 human donors and compared samples from donors with normal cognitive function to those with mild cognitive impairment at the earliest stages of Alzheimer’s disease, as well as those with later-stage dementia. (Koronyo, Y., Rentsendorj, A., Mirzaei, N. et al. Retinal pathological features and proteome signatures of Alzheimer’s disease. Acta Neuropathol (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00401-023-02548-2)
I grew up on baseball. When I was young I quickly realized that there was one position on the field that was noticeably different from the others. Most of the fielders faced a certain direction, had similar gloves, and the same basic uniforms. But the catcher had on pads, a facemask, faced the opposite direction, and had a mitt that was vastly different from the other players. I was told that this was for the player’s protection. You see, while all the other players only dealt with the intermittent grounder, fly ball, or throw, the catcher was bombarded by high energy pitches every play.