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Inside Lucia Eyes: Dan Huber’s Blue Light Brand for Work, Gaming, and Better Sleep

Lucia Eyes blue light glasses filter screens from morning to night. Designed for remote workers and gamers with lens-integrated technology for lasting, comfortable protection.

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We spend most of our waking hours staring at something that glows. Phone at breakfast, laptop all day, TV at night, and then the phone again because apparently the first round did not count. As screens become less of a tool and more of a permanent fixture of modern life, products designed to make those hours more comfortable are finding a growing audience.

Lucia Eyes, the blue light eyewear brand founded by Dan Huber, has built a following among exactly the people you would expect: remote workers, gamers, and professionals whose days move from one screen to the next with very few breaks in between.

A Brand Built Around Modern Screen Life

Most brands in this category begin with specifications and percentages. Lucia Eyes begins with a founder. According to the company, Huber spent years dealing with symptoms that eventually pushed him to look more closely at the role long hours in front of screens might be playing in his daily life. Frustrated by the options available on the market, he set out to create glasses he would genuinely want to wear himself, from morning video calls to late-night scrolling sessions.

Whether you’re a remote worker, a gamer, or simply someone who spends most of the day moving between screens, that experience has become increasingly relatable.

 

Designed for the Workday That Never Really Ends

For many people, work no longer happens in a single place or within a fixed schedule. A typical day can involve video calls, emails, presentations, spreadsheets, messaging apps, and then a few more hours on personal devices once the workday officially ends. Lucia Eyes positions its daytime collection around that reality.

The company says its daytime lenses filter approximately 50 percent of blue light while avoiding the heavy yellow tint commonly associated with older blue light glasses. The result is a pair of glasses designed to remain comfortable for long periods of use while still looking natural on camera, an important detail for anyone whose workday includes a steady stream of virtual meetings. After all, the best screen accessory is often the one you actually want to wear.

A Different Approach to Blue Light Protection

Perhaps the most distinctive part of the Lucia Eyes approach is how the company says it handles blue light filtering.

According to the brand, many blue light glasses rely on surface coatings that can gradually wear down over time. Lucia Eyes instead integrates the filtering technology directly into the polycarbonate lens itself, allowing the protection to remain part of the lens rather than a layer applied to the outside.

If that approach performs as intended, it offers an advantage not only in durability but also in consistency over the lifetime of the product.

For a category that has become increasingly crowded in recent years, product design decisions like these are often where brands begin to separate themselves.

The Evening Pair and the Growing Conversation Around Sleep

The other half of the Lucia Eyes lineup focuses on nighttime use. As conversations around sleep quality, screen habits, and evening routines continue to grow, many consumers have become more conscious of how late-night screen use fits into the equation.

Lucia Eyes says its nighttime glasses are designed to filter up to 100 percent of blue light during evening use, making them a natural companion for people who continue using screens long after sunset, whether that means finishing work, gaming with friends, or watching one episode that somehow becomes three. The appeal is straightforward: the modern world is unlikely to become less digital anytime soon, so many consumers are looking for ways to make their relationship with screens work a little better for them.

Built for More Than One Type of User

Lucia Eyes offers small, medium, and large frame options, along with styles designed specifically for computer users and gamers. That flexibility matters.

A product designed to be worn for hours at a time needs to fit comfortably, feel natural, and work across very different environments and routines. The design language stays relatively understated, avoiding the oversized or heavily tinted look that often defined earlier generations of blue light glasses. The result is something that feels more like an everyday accessory and less like specialized equipment.

A Mission Beyond the Product

One aspect of Lucia Eyes stands apart from much of the category. The company says that 100 percent of its net profits support HopeChain, a nonprofit organization focused on mental health and suicide prevention. Huber also hosts Yall-Cast, a podcast centered around mental health conversations and suicide prevention for younger audiences.

For Lucia Eyes, those initiatives are not presented as side projects but as part of the reason the business exists in the first place. For customers who care about where their purchases ultimately make an impact, that mission adds another layer to the story behind the brand.

The Bottom Line

Phones are not disappearing. Neither are laptops, gaming sessions, streaming platforms, or late-night group chats. For many people, the more realistic goal is not reducing screen time entirely but finding ways to make long hours in front of screens more comfortable and sustainable. Lucia Eyes positions itself around that reality.

With designs aimed at work, gaming, and nighttime use, along with an approach to lens construction that seeks to distinguish itself from many competitors, the company has built a brand that feels closely aligned with the way people actually use technology today. For anyone spending most of the day in front of a screen, that may be exactly the point.

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