auntblabby wrote:
ToughDiamond wrote:
Has anybody seen the total eclipse through eclipse sunglasses? We couldn't, it was just black (though the partials were good), so I'm wondering if it's a normal design feature of the glasses or if ours were particularly crappy in that regard. I've not been able to find anything on the Web saying eclipse glasses are useless for the totality.
you MUST doff the glasses upon totality, the glasses are too dark to see the corona by itself with the disc obscured by the moon.
Jakki wrote:
Yup was right there ....and enjoyed it very much...yes during totality , found the lenses on the eclipse glasses useless
even on my tablet lense,as a lense cover. ( during totality)
Thanks for clearing that up. Annoying that the Web hardly ever explains either the uselessness of the glasses or the safety of observing with the naked eye for the totality. Chat GPT was an exception (didn't find that out till it was too late), explaining that the Sun's corona doesn't harm the eye, but that source also quite wrongly said that the 1999 totality was visible from Leicester, UK.
Before knowing the truth about viewing the totality, I was a tad disturbed to find that permanent damage to vision from "looking at the eclipse with the naked eye" might not be noticed till a few days after the event, as I'd looked at it very briefly. Now I'm a tad miffed that I was too risk-averse and missed out on some of the fun. Stupid Internet. But I did at least see it.