NOCTIX BLUE LIGHT BLOCKING GLASSES
Prachi is 100% right. But here's the secret most people don't know about blue light glasses...
If you saw Prachi's post, you already know blue light glasses are a game-changer for sleep. But there's a massive catch:
Clear lenses only block 10-20% of blue light. That's nowhere near enough. To actually signal to your brain that it's nighttime, you need to block the specific 400–550nm wavelength.
That's exactly why Noctix lenses are ORANGE and why they block 99.9%.
What happens when you block the right wavelength, backed by 128+ studies:
- 58% Melatonin Boost (Univ. of Houston)
- 73% Sleep Quality Improvement (Columbia University)
- 60+ Mins Extra Sleep (Univ. of Alabama)
- 74% Reduction in Eye Strain
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Prachi uses Noctix, the glasses that block 99.9%, not 10-20% like clear lenses.
Prachi is right, but 90% of blue light glasses won't get you the same results
Here's the uncomfortable truth: most "blue light glasses" on Amazon with clear lenses are essentially cosmetic. They block only 10-20% of blue light nowhere near enough to signal your brain that it's nighttime.
That means your melatonin stays suppressed, your sleep quality stays poor, and you keep waking up exhausted even though you bought "blue light glasses."
The difference? Wavelength coverage.
- ✕Clear lenses: Block ~10-20% of blue light. Your brain still thinks it's daytime.
- ✕Cheap yellow/orange: Block ~20-50%. Better, but still not enough for the 400-550nm range.
- Noctix Orange: Blocks 99.9% of the entire 400-550nm spectrum. Your brain finally gets the "it's night" signal.
This is why Noctix lenses are Orange
It's not a style choice, it's physics. Orange is the only pigment that physically filters the 400-550nm wavelength that Prachi's brain needed blocked. Clear lenses can't do this. Period.
~10-20%
Blue Light Blocked
This is what most "blue light glasses" on Amazon actually do. An anti-reflective coating that bounces off a tiny fraction. Your brain still thinks it's broad daylight. Melatonin stays suppressed. Sleep stays poor. These are the glasses Prachi would NOT recommend.
~20-50%
Blue Light Blocked
Better than clear, but they fail the RGB test. They miss the critical 450-550nm green-light spectrum entirely. Not enough to restore melatonin. Not enough to transform your sleep quality the way Prachi described.
99.9%
Blue Light Blocked
Our embedded orange pigment physically absorbs the entire 400-550nm spectrum. This is the only way to truly restore melatonin production. This is what "completely transformed my sleep quality" actually looks like. This is why Prachi chose Noctix.
"I have never felt better or more rested"
Not clear lenses. Not cheap yellow tints. These are the results when you block the right wavelength — with orange.

"Man o man, I am so delighted. The quality of the lenses as well as the frame won my trust in the brand."
- Dr ShivamKrishn Agrawal

"My sleep quality has never been better. The ultimate hack for digital eye strain."
- Vishwanath Nayak

"Gifted my husband the Lunaire glasses. His eye fatigue immediately got better and he gets sleepy at night a lot earlier. Getting a pair for myself next!"
- Rashmitha D.

"I'm a physio therapist and work under LED lights all night. It reduces eye strain so much. My sleep has completely transformed."
- Ayesha
Not all blue light glasses are created equal
The glasses Prachi uses are orange for a reason. Here's why that matters:
The science behind the amber tint and how to spot fakes with the RGB test
Why orange? It's not marketing, it's physics.
Your screens emit light in the 400–550nm wavelength — the exact range that suppresses melatonin production. Clear coatings can only reflect a tiny sliver of that. But amber/orange pigment physically absorbs the entire spectrum, acting like a wall between your eyes and the sleep-disrupting light.
That's why every major sleep study from Houston to Columbia to Basel uses noctix like amber-tinted lenses, not clear ones. The tint IS the technology.
🔬 The RGB Test — Try This At Home
Open any RGB colour chart on your phone. Put your blue light glasses on and look at the light blue square (B). If you can still see blue through the lenses — they don't work.
CLEAR/Cheap Amazon LENSES
B looks Same-blue → FAIL ✕
NOCTIX ORANGE
B goes Grey → PASS ✓
With Noctix, the blue square goes completely Grey. That's 99% absorption. That's the difference between cosmetic glasses and the real thing. The ones Prachi uses.
Melatonin increase. Univ. of Houston (2017) — amber lenses restored the sleep hormone clear lenses can't.
Sleep quality improvement. Columbia University (2018) — using amber-tinted lenses specifically.
Minutes of extra sleep. Univ. of Alabama (2018) — amber lenses recovered over 1 hour of lost sleep.
All study references listed at the bottom of the page.




From poor sleep to "never felt better"
How to use
Wear them from sunset until you go to sleep. Change nothing else — same diet, same routine, same supplements. Let the orange lenses do what clear lenses can't.

Watching TV or movie

Working under artificial lighting

Scrolling on phone or tablet

In indoor lighting

Fashion statement
Get the blue light glasses that actually work.
Not clear lenses. Not cheap tints. The orange lenses backed by 128+ studies the same ones Prachi uses.
Our No-Risk Guarantee
Try Noctix for 30 nights. If your sleep quality isn't completely transformed if you don't feel better and more rested return them for a full refund. No extra fee. No questions asked.
"Only 1 in 500 people ever returns their Noctix."
FAQs
Scientific References & Studies
- Shechter A, Kim EW, St-Onge MP, Westwood AJ. "Blocking nocturnal blue light for insomnia: A randomized controlled trial." J Psychiatr Res. 2018 (Columbia University)
- Ostrin LA, Abbott KS, Queener HM. "Attenuation of short wavelengths alters sleep and the ipRGC pupil response." Ophthalmic Physiol Opt. 2017 (University of Houston)
- van der Lely S, et al. "Blue blocker glasses as a countermeasure for alerting effects of evening LED screen exposure." J Adolesc Health. 2015 (University of Basel)
- Representative research linking evening blue-light filtration with amber-tinted lenses to improved sleep quality in adult test groups.
Prachi's right. Blue light glasses work.
But only if they block the right wavelength.
Clear lenses block 10-20%. Noctix blocks 99.9%. That's the difference between "meh" and "completely transformed my sleep quality." Backed by 128+ studies.