The story happened in cootie‘s shop, once the game started, there’s a gypsy come to you and ask you to buy his glasses with the special function of perspective, you have two choices,buy the glasses or tell this gypsy fuck to go screw a goat. Buy it, if not you will be killed. Then you can see everyone in the shop naked without clothes. X-Ray Glasses That Can See-Through Objects Including Clothes and Makeup! And cards Shahab19_4u if any one get x-ray glasses let me also now i would also like to buy it.Thanku.
OK, so it wasn't really a vision-impaired pitcher on the hill that day - it was the Yanks' latest Japanese import, Kei Igawa. Turns out he pitched almost all of his Japanese games in domes and had trouble with daylight glare during his first spring training start (further details ), so for his next start he donned. Pitchers with dark glasses (not even in the Yanks' ), but they're still, so Igawa looked out there, like an outfielder who got lost and somehow found himself on the mound. Igawa's tinted turn on the mound is a good reminder of how big a role sunglasses play in baseball aesthetics these days. With a few, shades on the diamond used to begin and end with with those big tabs on the side and the telltale. These were once considered so cool that MLB marketed a in 1969, and you still see them, but they're far outnumbered these days by a rainbow of high-tech wraparound models (, ).
And while the flip-ups were worn only by infielders and outfielders, today's shades are worn by pretty much everyone, including, and one of the Brewers'. Even umpires, who used to eschew wearing sunglasses because it just encouraged more 'Hey, ump, are you?!' Heckling, now go tinted. Even wear shades under their masks.
The most famous baseball shades of recent years are probably the Oakley Thumps, complete with built-in MP3 player and earphones, worn by during a game in 2005. While Manny (who, incidentally, has been up to some lately) is the only player to wear Thumps during an actual game, Uni Watch has spotted several other MLBers wearing them during warmups, including, and new Devil Rays infielder (whose conventional shades look ). But that's nothing compared to the - a now-discontinued model from Oakley - that briefly wore during spring training when he was with the A's. Dude looked like he had a bra on his face!
(And speaking of the A's, it's worth noting that up until this year, their batting practice caps featured the team's signature white elephant mascot.) Today's players are so closely associated with their sunglasses that many of them have shades included in their bobblehead depictions, including (who's had several ),. Note that the sunglasses on Roberts' bobblehead are worn above the brim.
It's a detail (Roberts even wears his sunglasses on his cap ), but it's also part of a of which Uni Watch is none too fond. This style not only, but c'mon, what good are the shades gonna do you? If there's a fly ball hit into the sun, are you really gonna grab the specs off of your brim and slap them onto your head (an even trickier logistical proposition for the growing number of players who now position their cap-mounted shades )?
Look, if you're gonna wear 'em, then wear 'em, or else go with flip-ups. Ironically, most early ballplayers never wore sunglasses, even though they played exclusively during daylight, because mass-produced shades hadn't yet been invented. But some players learned to improvise: Paul Hines of the Providence Grays (an early National League team) may have worn smoked or tinted lenses as early as 1882. And according to the Baseball Hall of Fame's, 'In 1895, a number of ballplayers, including future Hall of Fame outfielder Jesse Burkett, experimented with baseball caps that had green-tinted, transparent bills. The idea was to allow the fielder a better range of view while protecting him from the glare of the sun, but apparently the see-through bills never caught on.' Unfortunately, no photos of this design have survived, but every now and then you'll see a of a player wearing smoked lenses (the most famous one is probably of a young Casey Stengel looking totally bad-ass in 1915), and it always looks, because most players simply didn't have access to shades in those days.
A big breakthrough came in 1912, when Pittsburgh manager Fred Clarke devised a cap with bolted. This design was used for a while, but true sunglasses didn't catch on until Foster Grants hit the market in 1929 and polarized lenses became available in 1936.
And even then, a shades-clad player still was considered something of a novelty for several more decades - the back of Cubs outfielder Lee Walls' 1959 Topps card mentioned, 'Lee's nickname is 'Captain Midnight,' because of the large dark glasses he wears,' even though his specs were by today's standards. Uni Watch hasn't yet seen a player wear sunglasses at night, although you'd think Brewers outfielder would be the first to do so, for. One non-player who wears shades during night games, however, is, who thinks the dark lenses make it harder for the opposing team to read his managerial moves. And he's not the only one who's used sunglasses for baseball subterfuge: Former MLB pitcher and current Giants broadcaster Mike Krukow has complained that the modern wraparound styles make it easier for batters to peek back at catchers' signals without being caught. And of course shades are always useful for a manager looking to go. Sunglasses figure prominently in plenty of other outdoor sports, including, and (where you can get your sunglasses fitted with a nifty little ). But sunglasses also pop up in places where you might not expect them.
Here's a selective rundown of shady characters in other sports: Basketball: After suffering an eye injury, wore throughout the late 1990s. More recently, the NBA's big shades-related news has been David Stern's, which bans the wearing of sunglasses indoors (a prohibition that apparently sent Juwan Howard ). And in the NCAA, Michigan State's Maurice Joseph, who usually wears, switched to a tinted model (just barely visible ) during the Spartans' season-ending loss to UNC last Saturday.
Football: Uni Watch isn't aware of any NFL players who've worn true sunglasses on the field, although several players wear those, and no doubt more would do so if they were allowed to (for more info on the NFL's restrictions on tinted visors, and other visor-related info, look ). Over on the sidelines, former 49ers and Panthers coach George Seifert usually went, even during night games (which, according to the seventh item on, once led Dennis Miller to do a Corey Hart impression).
And one off-the-field item of note: Joey Porter prior to the Steelers' post-Super Bowl visit to the White House last year, which explains why he ended up in the back of the room. No word on whether Porter will be wearing sunglasses for his.
Soccer: Dutchman has glaucoma, so he's received permission from FIFA to wear. Golf: For years golfers avoided wearing shades because they thought it affected how they read the greens, but now you see more and more on the links.
The most notable one is probably, who has light-sensitivity issues, so he usually (although on overcast days he sometimes like to ). Then there's Jarmo Sandelin, who wore the in. More recently, he's been wearing, presumably to avoid the glare coming off his own shirt.
Bowling: Ostensibly due to the bright TV lights - or maybe just because he's a jerk - wears sunglasses during. But sunglasses' days may be numbered, thanks to Nike's, which look. Already worn by several MLB players, including, and (no wonder he leaves his sunglasses above his brim), as well as by athletes in several other sports, they could eventually render sunglasses moot. Interestingly, the latest MaxSighted player is Kei Igawa's countryman and fellow MLB rookie. Uni Watch suspects Igawa soon will try the tinted lenses, too. In fact, Nike would be smart to sign all of MLB's Japanese players to MaxSight endorsement contracts. Japan, after all, is the Land of the Rising Sun, and the look like they were taken straight off the.
Nike marketers, feel free to use this idea, but Uni Watch expects full credit for this one when you roll out the ad campaign. (Big thanks to Brandon Davis, Patrick Keenan, Jim Vail, Scott M.X. Turner, Rodney Johnson, Dan Mullen, Frank Vaccaro, Tom Shieber, Brian Johnson, Brian Temke, Jeremy Brahm, the exhibit, and Uni Watch intern Vince Grzegorek for their invaluable research assistance.) Paul Lukas plans to order one of those Kent Tekulve T-shirts from.
His Uni Watch blog, which is updated daily, is, his answers to Frequently Asked Questions are, and archives of his columns are available,. Got feedback for him, or want to be added to his mailing list so you'll always know when a new column has been posted?
X-Ray Glasses Let Players See beneath Poker Cards Science and technology come into being for the purpose to serve human beings. An all-new type of x-ray glasses technology had been developed by British scientists. At the very beginning, x-ray glasses technology was used to identify whether criminals carry guns and knives or not lest the police or other people should suffer from dangerous attacks. Later, this advanced technology is applied to the field of poker cheating at a fast speed. Therefore, you can see many different kinds of advanced x-ray glasses sold at eyeglasses stores, magic shops and chess and card rooms. Perhaps, some people may ask such a question: how can I learn to use the newest advanced x-ray glasses well in gambling?
Actually, when a high-tech product enters our daily life, it is always convenient for ordinary customers to use. The x-ray glasses are without exception, too. With the newest design and the most advanced technology, a pair of cool x-ray glasses could truly allow users to see beneath many different kinds of poker cards, such as Bee, KEM and Fournier. It will have a better effect on the whole if you match it with a kind of marked poker cards. When you play cards with such a pair of x-ray glasses, you are able to see the suits and points of all the poker cards on the mahjong table and then choose to bet and follow according to what you have seen. To possess a pair of high-tech x-ray glasses is a luxury that is worth showing off for many people.
If you would like to keep up with the pace of the times and become a fashion icon, you might as well wear a pair of distinctive x-ray glasses. If you want to be a happy winner in a crazy casino, you are advised to have a pair of x-ray glasses on your eyes. If you are eager to amuse your fans, you are recommended to wear a pair of x-ray spectacles to see magic pokers on the stage.
![Glasses That Can See Through Clothes Game Glasses That Can See Through Clothes Game](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125487012/342427224.jpg)
Foe whatever purpose, there is a need for players and magicians to own a pair of cool x-ray glasses of their own.