The world's first noise-canceling sunglasses

Lens tech is complicated so here’s a little imagery to help you paint the picture…

Imagine you're 35. You just got off work and are headed to your 4th graders' woodwind concert. There are 35 kids on stage.

You’ve got Jeffrey on the symbols, taking a two-hour break from Minecraft. He smashes them when he sees fit and the conductor can’t wait to ship him off to middle school. The attire was black shirt and dress shoes, but he couldn't find his shirt, so he’s in an inside-out AAU jersey. 

Jeff bullies Clark and his twin brother Clay on the tambourines. They’re the quiet LEGO kids. Unless Jeff forgets his second symbol, their rhythmic shakes are washed out. It's a shame they can’t overcome his hazardous smashing. 

Next, you’ve got Caroline– first chair as they say. She plays the flute and comes from a long line of refined success. Her mom is a ballerina from Lithuania and her father a watchmaker. She practices every day and has a special flute she reserves for recitals. Aggregate spending on her private lessons soars over eight thousand dollars.

Behind Caroline you have Josh, Jit, and Joe. They started playing the flute to talk to Caroline. Together they know about six notes and play them once pointed to, often out of time.

Why are we telling you this? Well, each kid above represents a light spectrum. 

So Who's Who?

Jeff is harsh yellow light, he just creates noise and the band would be better off without him. Our lenses block  90% of harsh yellow. Sorry Jeff, go home.

Clay and his brother Clark are green and red. They help add depth and color perception, but Jeff’s hard smashing makes them less interpretable.

Caroline represents good blue (445 – 500 nanometers). We want to hear her solo– crisp, clean, and relaxing. She is refined and complements the rest of the band. 

The idiots next to her right are bad blue (400 - 445-nanometer). They might play the same instrument as Caroline but they're out of tune and time. They create noise and play over Caroline, disrupting the song and creating haze. We just want to hear Caroline, not the nonsense noise makers to her right. 

Managing light is like a band. When red, blue, and green come together you have clarity, enhanced colors, and superior vision. However, you’ve got to mitigate the squeakers, you’ve got to control and block harsh yellow light, and bad spectrums of blue. 

Do this and you’ll end up with Bajío’s proprietary LAPIS technology.