The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Virtual glasses tryouts offered

Warby Parker updates its ‘Home Try-On’ via augmented reality app.

- By Peter Holley

Way back in 2010, Warby Parker’s “Home Try-On” program changed the way people buy glasses.

Its secret? Creating a casual business transactio­n that felt more like commitment-free dating. The idea was simple: Customers could select multiple new frames online before testing them out for five days in person. Once the test drive was up, customers could commit to a pair of glasses after returning the frames by mail.

Nearly a decade and hundreds of millions in revenue later, the company has announced a more high-tech and expedited version of the same process. Last week, Warby Parker unveiled a tool that allows customers to try on frames in their app using augmented reality, a technology that superimpos­es computer-generated images onto real-world imagery. For example: your face on camera with various pairs of virtual Warby Parker glasses.

The company is not the first to allow customers to try on frames virtually, as the Verge noted, but it remains unique “by actually rendering the glasses in a live, 3D preview on your face with augmented reality.”

The app uses the phone’s camera and Apple’s Face ID, which uses 30,000 invisible dots and an infrared image to create a precise copy of a customer’s face. A photo-sharing option allows customers to enlist feedback from friends and family.

Warby Parker did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment about the tool, which it calls “Virtual Try-On.”

Testing products virtually could be a way for a company to overcome the challenge of evolving shopping habits. Increasing­ly, customers see brick-and-mortar stores less as shopping destinatio­ns and more as the final step in a multipart transactio­n that begins online, according to Michelle Tinsley, director of mobility and secure payments in the retail solutions division at Intel.

“When you take that effort, you go into the store, you actually want to complete [the transactio­n], so you’re going to be irritated or mad if you drove all the way to

the store only to be forced back online,” Tinsley told Racked in 2017. “We found that people only go into a dressing room once and get undressed once. If they can’t get the right size and the right fit and they leave the dressing room, it’s very hard to get them to go back into the dressing room a second time.”

In a video posted on Warby Parker’s Twitter feed, a customer is seen selecting a frame and then swiping through different variations of that frame using the company’s app. With each swipe, a new virtual pair of glasses is immediatel­y superimpos­ed on the customer’s face, which is being filmed in real time using her phone’s camera. When the customer turns her head, the virtual glasses stay on her face, shifting with the movements of her body.

Warby Parker isn’t the first company to help customers shop using augmented reality. In 2017, Gap unveiled an augmented shopping app that lets customers try on clothes virtually using an avatar with customizab­le body types, according to the company.

The Ikea Place app uses AR technology to allow customers to place pieces of furniture in their homes, according to the company.

“You see the scene as if these objects were real, and you can walk around them and interact with them, even leave the room and come back. It’s really magic to experience,” Michael Valdsgaard, the leader of digital transforma­tion at Inter IKEA Systems B.V., said in a statement on the company’s website.

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