Life Pro Tip: If you have an old retired pair of prescription glasses laying around, have one of the lenses ground down to snap into a keyring to fit in your wallet, or keychain, your choice.
Ignore the spikes LOL! But yeah, I keep that modded old lens in my wallet, in case I ever lose my glasses.
Oh, since you're apparently the creator of this community, I failed to mention the facts that I had to do my best to identify the exact center of the lens before grinding it down.
I did so by basically aligning an overhead light source against the reflection from both the front and back sides of the lens, then marked that spot with a sharpie marker, until I finished grinding anyways, then cleaned it off with rubbing alcohol.
Maybe I should have mentioned such details in my original post, I'm not even sure if I'm describing it properly, but I gather you totally understand.
Anyways, thank you for creating this community, and thank you for your skills and talents making frames and helping others with poor vision.
I know you only recently started this community, I hope to see it grow! 👓
One easier and more precise way to determine the optical center - and rotational alignment too, which is important if your correction has a cylinder, but you didn't mention it so I assume yours doesn't - is simply to go to an optician and ask them to pop your lens in their lensometer and measure it. The lensometer will spot 3 dots on the lens. The center dot is the optical center and the line formed by the 3 dots is the horizontal alignment.
A lot of opticians are located in malls or supermarkets, so it's simply a matter of taking your lens with you when you next go for groceries. It takes seconds to measure a lens and the optician won't charge you for it - and if they try, you'll know which optician never to patronize 🙂