Bausch & Lomb In 1929,
US Army Air Corps Colonel
John A. Macready worked with
Bausch & Lomb, a Rochester, New York-based medical equipment manufacturer, to create aviation sunglasses that would reduce the distraction for pilots caused by the intense blue and white hues of the sky. Specifically, MacCready was concerned about how pilots' goggles would fog up, greatly reducing visibility at high altitudes.
Ray-Ban Aviator 's signature look included his ornate hat,
corncob pipe, and Aviator sunglasses. (1944) The sunglasses were redesigned with a metal frame in 1938 and promoted by Bausch & Lomb as the Ray-Ban Aviator. According to the
BBC, the glasses used "Kalichrome lenses designed to sharpen details and minimise haze by filtering out blue light, making them ideal for misty conditions." In its military usage, the sunglasses replaced the outmoded flight goggles used previously, as they were lighter, thinner, and "more elegantly designed". Writing about the transition of aviators from military gear to a commercial product, Vanessa Brown wrote that, "The War was a ... revelation of the sheer might, scale, power, and horror of the modern world ... [which] necessitated a new kind of military demeanor and gave rise to new definitions of the heroic stance which was to have a profound influence on modern fashion." Eventually, the aviator sunglasses produced by Bausch & Lomb were trademarked as "Ray-Bans". Aviators became a well-known style of sunglasses when US General
Douglas MacArthur landed on a beach in the
Philippines in
World War II and newspaper photographers snapped several pictures of him in October 1944 wearing them that became a lasting image of the Second World War. Bausch & Lomb dedicated a line of sunglasses to him in 1987. In addition to popularity in the 1950s, aviators were popular in the 1970s and 1980s, being worn by public figures like
Slash,
Michael Jackson,
George Michael,
Tom Cruise,
Freddie Mercury,
Jeff Lynne,
Roger Waters and
Elvis Presley. Besides flexible cable temples and bayonet temples, non-U.S. Air Force issued glasses often feature traditional skull temples. The brow bar and temple end pieces of the Shooter and Outdoorsman variants have been covered through years with different materials. Aimed at the sports enthusiast and outdoorsman, The Ray-Ban Shooter variant incorporates a cigarette holder, a circular device located at the center of the nose bridge originally intended to free the sportsman's hands while taking aim. In 1953 Ray-Ban introduced G-15 tempered glass lenses. These neutral gray/green lenses transmit 15% of incoming visible light whilst providing "true" color and contrast distribution. ==Military type HGU-4/P aviator sunglasses==