I don't think I have 20/20 vision (at least not as good as my wife's
with her glasses on) but it's plenty good enough that I get by without
glasses except some inexpensive reading glasses and a slightly weaker
set for using the computer. Most of the time I need nothing. It's the
easiest "surgery" I've ever had. Essentially painless and a seeming
miracle for what it does for your vision. It takes a week or so before
you can really see properly in the affected eye but there is an
immediate effect that the world is suddenly very, very blue. You learn
instantly that you've been viewing the world through a yellow filter for
a long time. No one had told me about that beforehand and it was a bit
of a shock and revelation.
Chuck Norcutt
Brian Swale wrote:
> Chuck wrote
>> <http://www.chucknorcutt.com/Rose%20of%20Sharon/index.htm>
>>
>> The light was nice today after it finally stopped raining. Amazingly
>> these shots had to be adjusted up by almost 2 stops after I discovered
>> that the camera and incident meter were a long ways apart on ISO :-) I
>> deliberately set the meter and forgot to set the camera. I'm surprised
>> that they held together as well as they did with such a large exposure
>> adjustment.
>>
>> Hand held, Canon 5D, Zuiko 50/3.5 macro at f/11.
>>
>> They're not all in perfect focus but I've discovered I can use MF lenses
>> more easily now that my cataracts are gone. I think these are the first
>> macro shots I've tried since the eye surgery about a year ago. I guess
>> the eyes are working better than the memory.
>
> Good shots. congratulations on your eye recovery.
>
> My partner will have similar operations sometime in the next couple of years
> and it is encouraging to see your success.
>
> Brian Swale.
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