Glasses Bigger Than 150 mm: Where to Actually Find Them in 2026
A real listicle of brands selling glasses with a 150 mm+ front width — front-width numbers, materials, price ranges, prescription availability.
Published 2026-06-20 · 8 min read
If you measured your face and the answer is 150 mm or more, you've probably noticed the brands that "do oversized" mostly don't. The honest list of brands actually selling 150 mm+ front-width frames in 2026 is short — and it's compiled here, with the real numbers and trade-offs for each.
The shortlist
Woolet — 158 mm stock + 150–172 mm bespoke
Front: 158 mm (stock) · 150–172 mm (bespoke) · Bridge: 21 mm · Temples: 150 mm · Material: Italian Mazzucchelli acetate · Prescription: yes (lens-less shipping to your optician) · Price: $114 pre-order / $190 launch (stock); $299 (bespoke)
Woolet's 007 (round) and 009 (soft square) are designed front-out for 155 mm+ faces, not retrofitted from a standard frame. The atelier in Cadore, Italy uses Mazzucchelli M49 acetate and German OBE hinges. Bespoke runs the same atelier with a CAD file generated from the AI face scan. Strongest pick for premium Italian acetate at this size.
Faded Days — 155–165 mm
Front: 155–165 mm · Material: TR-90 plastic · Prescription: no (sunglasses only) · Price: $50–$155
The original wide-face sunglass specialist, founded by a wide-faced person who got tired of the problem. Faded Days does the fit honestly across the 155–165 mm range and the price is right for a casual lifestyle pair. Trade-offs: TR-90 plastic rather than acetate (lower long-term shape retention), and sunglasses only — no prescription. Strong second pair for weekends and beach.
BXL Eyewear — 145–165 mm
Front: 145–165 mm · Material: TR-90, titanium, some acetate · Prescription: yes · Price: $79–$125
The broadest range of shapes and materials in the specialist budget tier. Sizing claims are honest, prescription is available. Material quality is mixed — the TR-90 frames hit the lower price points; the titanium and acetate options are higher. Worth checking if you want multiple pairs at different price points and are willing to compromise on premium feel.
SizeGlasses — 140–165 mm
Front: 140–165 mm · Material: TR-90, acetate-poly blends · Prescription: yes (often included) · Price: $59–$99 with lenses
Functional, not fashionable. Best price point if you need wide-fit prescription glasses and don't care that the frame is recognisably budget plastic. Fit is genuine; longevity is limited (expect to replace within 18–24 months).
Jubleelens — some 150 mm+ models
Front: 138–155 mm (varies by SKU) · Material: acetate, metal · Prescription: yes · Price: $30–$120
An Amazon-first brand with a small subset of frames in the 150–155 mm range. Inconsistent — you have to filter carefully and the measurements aren't always reliable. Cheap, fast, no atelier story. Acceptable as a try-before-you-commit if you're still figuring out your size.
Tom Davies bespoke — unlimited (atelier)
Front: custom (any width) · Material: acetate, horn, titanium · Prescription: yes · Price: £950–£2,500 (~$1,200–$3,200)
The most established bespoke atelier in London. Includes two in-person consultations at a TD studio (London, Hong Kong, LA, others), CAD design, and a hand-finished frame. The price reflects the in-person service and bench labour. Right pick if you want the traditional bespoke experience and live near a TD studio, or you want a material outside Woolet's range (buffalo horn, titanium inlays).
Mainstream "wide" lines — caveat
Ray-Ban "Wide Fit", Warby Parker "Wide", Oakley XL, Persol "Large" — these mostly cap at 145–148 mm of front width. For a face below 150 mm, they work. For 150 mm or more, they do not, regardless of how the lens looks. Don't waste a return cycle.
Side-by-side at a glance
| Brand |
Front (mm) |
Material |
Rx |
Price |
| Woolet (stock) | 158 | Italian acetate | Yes | $114–$190 |
| Woolet (bespoke) | 150–172 | Italian acetate | Yes | $299 |
| Faded Days | 155–165 | TR-90 | No | $50–$155 |
| BXL | 145–165 | Mixed | Yes | $79–$125 |
| SizeGlasses | 140–165 | TR-90 blend | Yes | $59–$99 |
| Jubleelens | 138–155 | Mixed | Yes | $30–$120 |
| Tom Davies bespoke | Any | Acetate, horn, Ti | Yes | $1,200–$3,200 |
How to decide which one to buy
- Premium daily-wear prescription frame at 155–161 mm: Woolet stock at $190 is the obvious pick — premium Italian acetate, lens-less shipping for your optician, designed for this exact bracket.
- Premium frame outside 155–161 mm: Woolet bespoke at $299 covers the rest of the range with the same atelier and materials.
- Sunglasses for casual use, $50–$155: Faded Days. Honest fit, casual aesthetic, fast.
- Prescription at the lowest possible price: SizeGlasses or BXL TR-90. Accept the material and longevity trade-off.
- Traditional bespoke with in-person fitter: Tom Davies. Plan on $1,200+ and several appointments.
What to ask any of these brands before you buy
- What is the hinge-to-hinge front width in millimetres (not lens width)?
- What is the bridge and temple length?
- What material is the frame (Italian acetate, TR-90, injection plastic, etc.)?
- Does the frame accept prescription lenses, and does it ship lens-less to my optician?
- What is the return policy if the fit is wrong?
Next step
If you don't know your face width yet, the AI Fit Scan gives it to you in 90 seconds. If you already know you're 155 mm+, Woolet 009 at 158 mm or bespoke at $299 are the direct paths.
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