The World’s First Contact Lenses

Daniel Ganninger
Knowledge Stew
Published in
3 min readAug 25, 2020

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The world’s first successful contact lenses were anything but comfortable. The first lenses were made by Dr. Adolf Fick in 1888 from blown glass.

The lenses had some serious drawbacks, however. They were extremely heavy and thick. The lenses also covered the entire eye, which didn’t allow the eye to receive oxygen. For these reasons, the blown glass lenses, which were known as scleral lenses, could only be worn for a few hours because of eye irritation that occurred with the wearer.

Dr. Fick first tested the lenses on rabbits before testing it on himself and a group of volunteers. He is usually credited with the invention of the contact lens because he was the first to propose that they could be used to specifically correct vision.

Fick wasn’t the first to come up with the idea of corrective lenses to be placed directly on the eyes, however. Leonardo da Vinci proposed the idea of submerging the head in a bowl of water to change vision in 1508. He even came up with a device that could be worn over the eye, which could have water poured into it. René Descartes used a similar idea in 1836 that was based on da Vinci’s observations. He proposed using a glass tube filled with liquid that would be placed directly on the cornea. The problem was the wearer wouldn’t have been able to blink.

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Daniel Ganninger
Knowledge Stew

The writer, editor, and chief lackey of Knowledge Stew and the Knowledge Stew line of trivia books. Connect at knowledgestew.com and danielganninger.com