User talk:Eddisonsfanatic

Developed in the 1800’s the Mutlichroma Ocular Lense was a revolutionary invention for a black and white society. The lense allowed the human eye to view the world in color which was previously a rare genetic disorder that only 2% of the world experienced.

The idea began with a stroke of genius from inventor Thomas Edison in 1858, who was one of the 2% to see in color. He developed the lense out of a clear carbon fiber with micro-light prisms inserted to reflect the light allowing the eye to see the full color spectrum. The lense was sadly left on Edison’s desk and was not released to the medical world until Nikola Tesla went to an estate sale and bought the paper work.

The lense didn’t gain popularity until the early 1920’s when Andrew Carnegie suffered a traumatic eye injury and was prescribed a multichroma lense. He then invested in large scale production and began distributing the lense across the country. When the economic depression hit Carnegie’s lense factory was burned down in protests and has never rebuilt.

When the United States was entering WWII and the troops needed cutting edge technology to gain territory against Nazi Germany. The Ford Motor company began a second wave of multichroma lense production this time shipping all of them over seas and selling them to hospitals across the US. Under the Nixon administration the government mandated that the lense be provided to every citizen for free.

Under the demand for a large amount of lenses many produced in the 70’s were proven later to be defective. In the 1980’s a new lense was developed the Multichroma Oculus Lense was introduce and the previous lense was discontinued.

Today, every US citizen revived a lense at birth and they tend to need replacement every 15-20 years. Issues your lense could develop include prison breakage which cause loss of sight in color, carbon fractures which affect color saturation, and general wear and tear.