The characteristic of all Lunor glasses is their simple, timeless elegance. These classic glasses do not need big logos, flashy colors or fancy designs.
Lunor glasses are stylish and unmistakable in their own special way. A pair of Lunor glasses from the early 90s collection would still fit into a current eyewear collection today, and no one would suspect that they are "old glasses".
The round, oval and square Lunor glasses are simply classics in terms of design and craftsmanship.
Even the model names of the Lunor glasses could not be simpler, and orient themselves in principle likewise toward centuries past. Thus, a Roman numeral first identifies the eyewear series, followed by an Arabic number that defines the shape of the eyewear.
The "Roman I", for example, stands for metal frames with telescopic sliding temples. The "Arabic 1" represents the octagonal shape. Accordingly, the Lunor I 01 are octagonal telescopic glasses. The Lunor I 04 has an oval frame with sliding temples, the Lunor I 12 a round shape with telescopic temples, and so on.
The "Roman II" marks the Lunor glasses series which is characterized by metal frames with an anatomical nose bridge. The Lunor II 04 are therefore oval metal glasses with an anatomical bridge.
This system is simple and yet well thought-out – just like Lunor eyewear.
Just as Lunor does without eye-catching brand logos, the company does not flout the big names of famous Lunor eyewear wearers, although there is actually hardly any greater compliment when personalities such as Steve Jobs (Lunor Classic Round), George Clooney (Lunor A5 215) or Daniel Craig (Lunor A6 246) wear their own glasses and even make them their personal trademark.
Steve Jobs wore his Lunor glasses all the time and spoke as little about Lunor as Lunor did about Steve Jobs. A true understatement.