How do you clean your glasses?

Lens manufacturers say that anything other than a microfiber cloth will damage the coatings on a lens. But microfiber cloths eventually pick up crap and they look like they’re a pain to wash.

How do you keep your lenses clean? Are you using cloth/kleenex or microfiber cloths? If you use microfiber cloths, how do you clean those?

Smokeydope, (edited )
@Smokeydope@lemmy.world avatar

Ive never had any luck with lens cleaner+microfiber cloth just smears the shit out of glasses. Here’s my glasses cleaning process, I have had glasses my entire life and can’t stand smearing even a little. My glasses coating has never been damaged from this though to cover my ass I will say do at your own risk.

  1. Get paper towel, wet and spray with a liquid soap+water mix spray bottle I recommend Dr.bronner soap very environmentally friendly works well You can also use regular dish soap if that’s all you have.
  2. rub lenses with soapy paper towel really well on both sides. Get it soapy.
  3. (MOST IMPORTANT PART TO PREVENT SMEAR) rinse soap off glasses and gently shake frames to get off all excess water that you can. Then grab 5-8 sheets of toilet paper, roll/fold into a square and fold tp square gently around lenses to wick remaining water. Do not rub tp into lenses, only gently press.
EyesEyesBaby,

Optometrist here; rinse with cold or ambient temperature tap water (don’t use hot water!), use dishwashing soap without citric acid if the glasses are really dirty, dry with a clean cotton cloth.

Voli,

Hand soap works fine as well.

Rivalarrival,

Some hand soaps have moisturizers that leave a film on lenses. I do not recommend.

PM_Your_Nudes_Please,

Not if it’s moisturizing soap. The moisturizers are designed to remain after rinsing, which will leave an oily film on your glasses. Dish soap is designed to rinse clean, so you should use that instead.

megane_kun,

That’s the way I’ve been taught by the guy who makes my eyeglasses too! I remember being slightly incredulous but took his word for it.

I only touch the lenses while soaping it, making sure that (liquid dish) soap is evenly distributed across the lenses. Then, I rinse them thoroughly in a stream of running water until I can no longer see water spots on their surfaces. I give the eyeglasses a slight tap to dislodge any excess water before wiping it with a dry clean cotton cloth I reserve for that purpose.

sxan,
@sxan@midwest.social avatar

Thank you! It took me decades before I figured out that it doesn’t matter how soft the cloth is if all you’re doing in scrubbing abrasive dust or dirt around on the lens with it. It isn’t always possible, but I try to rinse first to get as much particulate matter off before wiping.

Can you explain why cold water? I’ve always done it, but only because I once made the mistake of buying photoreactive lenses (and, you know, most of us just have to live with a decision like that for a while), and hot water made them go dark. I didn’t think tap water temps would be enough to mechanically stress the material; is the plastic so soft that it could be damaged, or is there another reason?

EyesEyesBaby,

Hot water can damage your anti reflective coating. It can cause it to come ‘loose’.

The rinsing is indeed done to get rid of sand or dirt particles which is the main cause of scratches.

PopShark,

Hey now don’t diss photoreactive lenses, I got off brand transitions lenses for the first time in my life a couple years ago after a decade without trying them and I honestly like it. I can keep my prescription shades in my car since my car’s windshield blocks a lot of UV so my regular/transitionable glasses won’t darken enough but most cases I’m outside on a sunny day I can still get some sunlight dimming without having to bring my sunglasses everywhere too

sxan,
@sxan@midwest.social avatar

I guess? I space 10 years between photoreactive lenses, and although I’ve only done it twice, I didn’t see any improvement between in the intervening years.

I haven’t tried the most modern version, but they’ve never darkened enough, and they don’t lighten quickly enough. On top of that, the shelf life of the photoreactivity is crap, and the performance degrades quickly, forcing me to replace my lenses more frequently than I otherwise would. IME, photoreactive lenses are just a contract to buy new glasses in few years.

osbo9991,

I generally use a similar method to this to deep clean my glasses, but I often don’t want to do that deep of a clean all the time since my glasses get dirty fast. I find the Zeiss glasses wipes work well for me, but there is a lot of waste involved. Oddly enough, their cleaning spray works terribly for me, and it seems to just spread grease around the lenses…

I was looking at the ingredients for each, and it seems that Zeiss used different ingredients for the two products. The wipes contain water, isopropyl alcohol, and “proprietary detergents and preservatives”. The cleaning spray contains water, butyl diglycol, and two other ingredients that to my knowledge are just preservatives. I think that in theory I could make a better cleaning spray by getting the right concentration of isopropyl alcohol and distilled water, mimicking the concentration in the wipes. What do you think is the highest percentage of isopropyl alcohol that I could safely use on glasses without damaging coatings?

EyesEyesBaby,

Unfortunately I cannot answer that question. Opticians don’t use alcohol to clean glasses, they often use white spirit to clean lenses. Alcohol can potentially damage your frame (if it’s a ‘plastic’ one).

HejMedDig,

What do you use to wipe away the cleaning spray? Microfiber cloths don’t absorb so we’ll, so you’ll usually get a better result using something cotton

osbo9991,

When I tried to use it, I sprayed the Zeiss spray onto a Zeiss supplied microfiber cloth (was part of a kit I got from an optometrist), wipe the glasses, then use a dry part of the microfiber cloth to wipe it away. I don’t think a more absorbent cloth would help much since it’s a greasy residue. Plus, other sources tell me that I shouldn’t use anything other than microfiber to clean my glasses. The spray just seems like a poorly formulated product that can’t cut through grease like dish soap or the Zeiss disposable wipes.

HejMedDig,

We also give out sprays and microfiber cloths, and I always tell people to use them apart. Just because both says Zeiss doesn’t mean they’re to be used together

osbo9991,

I should have clarified that they were both part of the same kit, with no other cloths provided.

Also, what I do is pretty much the same as what Zeiss says to do in their instructions, see this video link (couldn’t find written instructions on their site): www.zeiss.com/…/eyeglass-cleaning-solutions.html#…

Lastly, what do you mean by using the spray and cloth apart? Do you mean using the cloth dry? Because that is even greasier than using the spray+cloth.

sbv,

Thanks! That looks pretty easy, and it seems to work for a few other posters.

User name checks out.

wispydust,

Thanks for the tip. Just to be clear… are these instructions for cleaning the glasses, or the microfibre cloth?

EyesEyesBaby,

Glasses

idkwhatimdoing,

I use a chamois cloth, seems to pick up oil/smudges even better that microfiber and need less washing. Also super easy to wash when it does need it. I basically just cut a dollar bill sized section off a natural off-brand sham-wow and it works better than anything else I’ve used

JustZ,

Got a box of alcohol wipes made by Zeiss, specially for cleaning camera lenses and the like. Works great on glasses.

towerful,

I bought a box when they were cheap on Amazon.
Handy for having in your bag. But so much waste. Plastic sachet, plastic cloth, throw it all out.

I want to find a reusable liquid/cloth solution that works as reliably, but the Zeiss wipes are just too good.

JustZ,

Hmmm, I think mine are paper materials. I’ll have to look more closely.

bstix,

Just water and a regular dishtowel. If they’re more dirty I’ll use dishwasher soap. Rub it over with a finger to get the greesy stuff off and wash the soap off.

The microfiber cloth that usually comes with the glasses tend to stop working after a while, and I always have clean dishtowel anyway.

Outside my kitchen I use my t-shirt or if I’m wearing a shirt, I’ll use the underwear top, because shirts generally aren’t too good at it due to prints or fabrics. Yes I wear a “wife beater” under my shirt. It’s what it’s for, and I guess also for cleaning glasses.

sbv,

The microfiber cloth that usually comes with the glasses tend to stop working after a while, and I always have clean dishtowel anyway.

That’s what got me started on this. My cloth got grungy and it started making my glasses worse.

Imgonnatrythis,

Microfiber. Throw it in the wash. Air dry (although I’ve never had an issue with them going through wash) I use the viscous cleanser and really don’t wash very often at all.

saigot,

I use glass cleaner (I think it’s called WHOOSH) and a microfiber cloth to my glasses and displays.

Klanky,
@Klanky@sopuli.xyz avatar

Use soap and water and rub it with my fingers. Shake the excess water off then use a microfiber to finish up. We use microfibers to clean around the house and always have clean ones handy.

Fixbeat,

I wear cotton t-shirts, so I have a drawer full of clean ones. I wash my glasses with foaming hand soap with my fingers, then dry with a shirt from the drawer. Not really had any problems, but I buy polycarbonate lenses with no coatings.

renlok,

I clean them with the hem of my shirt, always assumed this is what everyone does.

HonoraryMancunian,

It is

Don’t let Big Microfibre tell you otherwise

bobs_monkey,
naalo,

That’s what I do, but it works better if I use glass cleaner.

shinigamiookamiryuu,

I’ve never been without at least twenty microfiber cloths before.

ryannathans,

Spray from optometrist and tissues to remove most oil

Then polish the lenses with the microfibre that came with them

Wash the microfibre when it stops working

kaitco,

I’ve been using Windex and Bounty. 😬 Probably not the best options, but they seem to get the job done for me.

I mention Bounty because regular paper towels are crap for that sort of thing.

Z3k3,

I tend to wear cotton t shirts so I tend to just grab a corner of that to clean em.

Been doing this for 20 yrs and never had to replace a set before my eyes said otherwise.

Frames on the other hand…

colourlessidea,

+1 for cotton T shirt corner! Been doing that for 20 years as well

Thavron,
@Thavron@lemmy.ca avatar

You clean your frame?

(Kidding)

NotAnArdvark,

Every once in a while I’ll use dish soap and my fingers, then dry with a microfiber cloth.

Microfiber cloth and whatever that glasses spray is works ok, but after a while it feels like I’m just pushing smudges around. Dish soap for the microfiber cloth will also fix that.

When I see people using their shirt to clean their glasses I cringe inside.

girl,

I do both. Once or twice a week they get washed. But I never remember to bring a cloth with me, so if I’m out and about and get a smudge on my glasses, using my shirt is 1000% preferred over just leaving the smudge there.

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