Tokyo Round
Tokyo Round
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The round frame is the oldest shape in eyewear and the one that has never fully gone away. Tokyo Round takes that lineage seriously — a thick double-ring front with the same bi-color temple construction and gold rivet detail as its oval counterpart, scaled up to a near-perfect circle. At 55mm wide and 56mm tall, this is one of the fullest round frames in the Urban Vintage collection. It covers the face generously, catches light at every angle, and carries a quiet authority that takes about thirty seconds to register.
A round frame built around a detail
The defining feature of Tokyo Round is not the shape — round frames are everywhere. It is the temple construction: each arm transitions between two materials mid-point, fixed with a small gold rivet that reads as deliberately considered rather than decorative. The thick double-ring front adds a sculptural depth that most round frames flatten out. At 29g the frame sits lightly despite its visual weight. Nine colorways from a clean Black/Black to a translucent Brown/Clear, with Tortoise/Brown and Black/Brown as the standout everyday options and Brown/Grey for those who want something warmer and less expected.
UV400 coverage for full days outside
Scratch resistant eco-friendly polycarbonate lenses with full UV400 protection. The 55mm width and near-circular 56mm height provide maximum coverage for outdoor festival days — more lens area than any other frame in the Urban Vintage collection. Tokyo Round was built for the kind of day that starts at a market and ends in front of a stage, with no opportunity to go back and change.
Tokyo Oval and Tokyo Round — two versions of the same idea
Tokyo Round and Tokyo Oval share the same DNA — double-ring front, bi-color temple, gold rivet — but they land differently on the face. Tokyo Oval is slightly narrower and more elongated, sitting closer to a classic vintage aesthetic. Tokyo Round goes fuller and more circular, referencing the round frames of the 1960s and 70s that appeared on everyone from John Lennon to the crowds at early Glastonbury. If you already own one, the other makes sense. If you are choosing between them, it comes down to face shape and how much frame you want the world to see.
Explore the full collection
Urban Vintage Sunglasses — 14 retro frames for festivals, travel and everyday wear.
Y2K Rave Sunglasses — futuristic frames for indoor sets and endless nights.
Trippy Festival Glasses — for those who want their sunglasses to tell a story.
