<P> Since many inventions are developed independently by more than one person, it is possible that the invention of bifocals may have been such a case . </P> <P> John Isaac Hawkins, the inventor of trifocal lenses, coined the term bifocals in 1824 and credited Dr. Franklin . </P> <P> In 1955, Irving Rips of Younger Optics created the first seamless or "invisible" bifocal, a precursor to all progressive lenses . </P> <P> Original bifocals were designed with the most convex lenses (for close viewing) in the lower half of the frame and the least convex lenses on the upper . Up until the beginning of the 20th century two separate lenses were cut in half and combined together in the rim of the frame . The mounting of two half lenses into a single frame led to a number of early complications and rendered such spectacles quite fragile . A method for fusing the sections of the lenses together was developed by Louis de Wecker at the end of the 19th century and patented by Dr. John L. Borsch, Jr. in 1908 . Today most bifocals are created by molding a reading segment into a primary lens and are available with the reading segments in a variety of shapes and sizes. The most popular is the D - segment, 28 mm wide (citation needed). While the D - segment bifocal offers superior optics, an increasing number of people opt for progressive bifocal lenses . </P>

Who created the first seamless bifocal a precursor to all progressive lenses