
Nouvelle Vague
Today, Frame France spectacles are design icons. Not because they shouted the loudest - but because they didn't shout at all
British Summer Time
Then out here, early one morning, it became British Summer Time, a temporal adjustment for making the most of the light we are given.

Spectacles
Your eyes are magnificent. Dress them accordingly. Spectacles made for advanced vision and better living, to suit a range of tastes and a range of heads. From Extra Small to Extra Large, with fits fine-tuned for a heterogenous range of noses. Including ZEISS precision lenses as standard.

Accessories
Tools to keep your frame in fine fettle. Including clip-on sunglasses for the sun's fickle glow, the ultra-lightweight Cubitts aluminium case, the compact vegetable tan leather 'REDUX case', and cleaning cloths featuring work by artists including David Shrigley, Tracey Emin, and Grayson Perry.

Sunglasses
Some see the world in black and white. You, however, demand a broader spectrum. Cubitts sunglasses feature ZEISS precision lenses in a range of tinted hues, featuring full UVA and UVB protection, with and without prescription.

Clip-on
Crafted in stainless steel and designed for daily ease, our clips offer the full protection of UV400 sunglasses — without ever needing to take off your spectacles.

Our stores
Sunglasses
Spectacles
Bespoke
Bespoke

Our frames
A pair of spectacles should accentuate the beauty of human form, not conceal it. So Cubitts shapes emphasise simplicity, line, and form. Good design never goes out of style.

Artist-designed cloths
Our spectacle cleaning cloths are pocket-sized artworks, created in collaboration with a new artist every six months. Designed to delight the eye as much as clean it — a canvas of care as much as function, with all proceeds donated to charity.

Services
The Cubitts workshop is designed to welcome spectacles and sunglasses that have seen a lot of life and make them feel young again. Discover a range of services to help your well-loved frame last a lifetime.

London and a history of spectacle making
London is a city steeped in the history of spectacle design. From the earliest pair of spectacles ever discovered—the 15th century ‘Trig Lane’ bone spectacles—to Cubitts’ ‘Frame for London’, composed of detritus gathered ‘mudlarking’ along the river Thames, including Tudor hair pins, a WW2 bullet, and – like their mediaeval forebears – animal bones.