Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Fashion & Style
  3. Deals
  4. Deals

These Ray-Ban sunglasses are all the way down to $75 — grab them now!

On Sale The Ray-Ban Steve Sunglasses on a white background.
Ray-Ban

If you want to get a new pair of sunglasses, why not go for a Ray-Ban? If you’re worried that the popular brand’s products are too expensive, there’s an offer from Jomashop that makes the Ray-Ban Steve Sunglasses more affordable. From their original price of $151, they’re down to just $116, but if you enter the code SUN35 upon checkout, you can get them for only $75. That’s less than half their regular price, but you need to hurry if you want to take advantage of the $76 in savings as we think stocks are already running low.

Buy Now

Recommended Videos

Why you should buy the Ray-Ban Steve Sunglasses

If you’re not sure what sunglasses to buy, check out our guide on how to choose the best men’s sunglasses for your face. However, for most people, Ray-Ban sunglasses are perfect for them, and you can’t go wrong with a classic design such as the Ray-Ban Steve Sunglasses. With a nylon frame and lenses that provide 100% UV protection, you can wear these sunglasses for any occasion, including when you’re joining events, taking the car out for a drive, or simply hanging out with your friends outdoors.

Ray-Ban added smart glasses, in partnership with Meta, to the types of sunglasses that it offers, but if you’re looking for something more traditional with a square frame, the Ray-Ban Steve Sunglasses are highly recommended. They come with a case for protection when you’re throwing them in your bag, and a polishing cloth to clean the lenses when they get wet from splashes of water or get dirty from waves of dust.

Most people would assume that Ray-Bans would be expensive, but Jomashop has a fantastic deal for the Ray-Ban Steve Sunglasses right now. Originally sold for $151, they’re on sale for $116, but entering the code SUN35 during the checkout process will drop their price further to only $75. Where else can you get them for about half-price after a $76 discount? You’re going to have to act fast though, as there’s a chance that stocks get depleted as soon as tomorrow. Complete your purchase for the Ray-Ban Steve Sunglasses as soon as you can!

Buy Now

Aaron Mamiit
Aaron received an NES and a copy of Super Mario Bros. for Christmas when he was four years old, and he has been fascinated…
Longines refreshes its cult-favorite central power reserve in light blue
The Swiss watch company is giving the Conquest Heritage Central Power Reserve some new dial and bracelet options.
Wristwatch, Arm, Dial

Longines has been around since 1832, which makes it one of the oldest continuously operating watchmakers on Earth — old enough to have spent decades strapped to the wrists of aviators and explorers before most brands existed. So when the Saint-Imier company, now part of the Swiss giant Swatch Group, revives something from its own archives, it's got real history to draw on. The Conquest Heritage Central Power Reserve is a good example.

The Conquest line dates to 1954 — the first Longines collection to have its name trademarked with the Swiss IP office. And in 1959, one Conquest model introduced the complication this watch is built around: a power reserve indicator planted dead center on the dial. For 2026, Longines has given the modern revival a light refresh: a new light-blue opaline dial and (for the first time on this model) a stainless-steel bracelet alongside the returning dark leather strap.

Read more
Shohei Ohtani’s newest Seiko is out of this world
Seiko built Shohei Ohtani a one-of-one watch that tracks a million hours across five rotating discs — and you can't buy it.
Wristwatch, Arm, Body Part

The Seiko Star Time, presented to Shohei Ohtani on July 3, marks his tenth year as a Seiko ambassador. It's not for sale, will never be for sale, and there's exactly one on Earth — currently strapped to the best baseball player alive. Oh, and also? It looks absolutely nuts. Instead of hands, the Star Time tells time with five stacked, concentric discs, each tracking a different scale of accumulated time: 24 hours, then 1,000, 10,000, 100,000, and finally a disc that runs all the way to one million hours.

That's roughly 114 years — a full human lifetime, give or take. The discs turn continuously, so slowly you can't see them move. Seiko named it "Star Time" for exactly that reason: like stars drifting across the sky, the motion is imperceptible in the moment but relentless. A little existential for a watch company, but let's go with it.

Read more
The Internet Killed Expertise and Then Made It Cool Again
How the Internet Killed Expertise, Made It Worthless, and Then Made It Cool Again
Watchmaker's workshop. Mechanical watch repair.

We’ve gone through a little period that I like to call the “Dark Ages of Knowing Things,” when the internet had an entire generation of men convinced they no longer needed experts. Why would they? Everything was available at the drop of a hat, and with one Google search, you could have the world at your fingertips. There were deep-dive forum threads written by a retired Swiss watchmaker in Neuchâtel who had seen 40 years of studying the serif on a Rolex dial (probably, but I can’t actually verify that.) It was all there, free for the taking, and unfortunately, completely indistinguishable from a guy who just bought his first watch 6 weeks beforehand and was already writing a buying guide. 

For a while at least, it felt like the walls were coming down, and in some ways, they were. The gatekeepers no longer had their gates, which meant that a kid from Doncaster could learn to identify a fake Submariner faster than a back-alley dealer who had been in the business for 20 years if he simply spent enough nights casually perusing Reddit threads. Knowledge, we were told, should be free. Of course, nobody mentioned that free knowledge and good knowledge are not the same thing.

Read more