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For years, luxury eyewear meant Italian acetate or French heritage names, but in 2026 the most coveted sunglasses on the runway, the red carpet, and inside K-pop music videos are increasingly designed in Seoul. Korean eyewear has quietly evolved from a niche optical category into one of the strongest pillars of K-fashion, with homegrown brands like Gentle Monster, Carin, and a wave of indie labels redefining how the world wears glasses.
The shift is structural. According to Lotte Department Store, eyewear sales jumped 40 percent in 2024, with Shinsegae and Hyundai Department Stores following close behind. Foreign tourist purchases of Korean eyewear surged 70 percent the same year, a sign that K-glasses are now part of the same global pilgrimage as K-beauty and K-pop merch.

Gentle Monster: The Eyewear Brand That Became an Art Gallery
Gentle Monster, founded in 2011 by Kim Han-kook, is the brand that turned Korean sunglasses into a global luxury phenomenon. Its early fame came when actress Jun Ji-hyun wore a pair in the 2014 hit drama My Love From the Star, and the brand has since expanded to 16 countries including stores in Soho New York, Le Marais Paris, and 10 Corso Como Milan. What makes Gentle Monster different is its philosophy: a store is never just a store. Each flagship is treated like a contemporary art installation, with rotating sculptural exhibits, robotic creatures, and immersive spatial design. The Haus Dosan flagship in Apgujeong houses Gentle Monster eyewear alongside Tamburins beauty and Nudake desserts on six floors of experimental retail.

Carin Eyewear: The Suzy Effect and a Global Push
If Gentle Monster represents Korean eyewear's avant-garde, Carin represents its accessible, feminine, design-forward heart. Launched by Sol Eyewear in 2014, Carin combines Scandinavian minimalism with a fit built for Asian face shapes. The brand exploded after signing Bae Suzy as its global muse in 2016, with frames selling out repeatedly across Asia. In 2024 Carin signed NewJeans for its New Rhythm spring campaign, refreshing the brand for a Gen Z audience. Today Carin operates flagship lounges in Hongdae and Cheongdam, ships to over 30 countries, and has become a fixture inside Lotte and Shinsegae beauty halls.

The Indie Wave: Tom N Rabbit, 6 People, JJ Rambow Studio
Beyond the two giants, a generation of indie Korean eyewear brands is reshaping the scene. Tom N Rabbit specializes in sport-casual frames with thicker bridges and rubberized temples, popular among runners and the recent Seoul jogging boom. 6 People, founded by six Seoul designers, leans into pared-back minimalism with monochrome acetate and titanium frames priced lower than Gentle Monster. JJ Rambow Studio in Seongsu-dong leans into vintage Y2K silhouettes with chunky frames in candy tints. Vedi Vero, the heritage brand backed by the same parent group as Iicombined, focuses on architectural rimless styles, while Audrey and June is becoming a favorite of Korean stylists for retro cat-eyes and small ovals.
K-pop Idols Who Put Korean Eyewear on the Global Map
No discussion of K-eyewear works without K-pop. BLACKPINK's Jennie became Gentle Monster's defining muse with the Jentle Garden and Jentle Salon collaborations, which sold out worldwide and turned pop-up launches in Seoul, Hong Kong, and Los Angeles into fan pilgrimages. BTS's Jungkook and Suga have been spotted in Gentle Monster's Manomos Disco, and BTS V favors Gentle Monster D-frames in his airport looks. Karina of aespa appears in Gentle Monster's recent global campaigns, while NewJeans members have made Carin frames a Gen Z signature. When BTS Jimin received custom Gentle Monster Woogie 02 sunglasses, the model sold out internationally within days.

Where to Shop Korean Eyewear in Seoul
Garosu-gil in Sinsa-dong is the heart of the K-eyewear pilgrimage. Gentle Monster's Sinsa flagship features a sculpted white exterior and the rotating Time Sleep theme. A short walk away, Haus Dosan and Tamburins anchor Apgujeong. Hongdae is the indie circuit, where the Carin Hongdae Lounge sits near smaller select shops like Optic Project, a curated multi-brand boutique. Inside Lotte Department Store's Avenuel hall in Jamsil and The Hyundai Seoul in Yeouido, Gentle Monster mega-stores now sit next to Reclow, Lash, and Blue Elephant pop-ups. Travelers also hunt at the Lotte Department Store Hongdae branch, which dedicates floor space to mid-range Korean eyewear brands.
How Korean Eyewear Differs From Western Brands
Korean eyewear is engineered for Asian face shapes, with shorter nose bridges, lower frame curvatures, and lighter acetate or titanium constructions. Where Italian frames often emphasize heritage logos, Korean labels lead with concept design, with each collection built around a thematic story or K-pop styling reference. Frames tend to run lighter, often under 20 grams, with thinner temples for long wear under camera lighting. Pricing is the other shock: a Gentle Monster runs roughly 290,000 to 400,000 KRW, Carin sits at 150,000 to 250,000 KRW, and indie labels like 6 People often land below 120,000 KRW, undercutting European luxury while matching design quality.
Prescription Glasses Culture and the Blue-Light Boom
Beyond fashion, Korea's everyday prescription eyewear culture is its own phenomenon. Chains like Mido Glasses, Davich Optical, and Lotte Lookoptical offer same-day prescriptions starting under 50,000 KRW including frame and lens, a price that astonishes foreign visitors. Office workers and students fueled the blue-light glasses trend, with brands like Levante, Folder Optical, and Carin's clear-frame line dominating sales. Many Korean optical stores now offer free eye exams, in-store frame customization, and 30-minute turnaround, turning prescription shopping into a quick lifestyle errand instead of a medical chore.
Why Korean Eyewear Is the Next K-Fashion Wave
K-eyewear sits at the intersection of three forces that already drive K-beauty and K-fashion: trend-setting K-pop idols, design-led brand storytelling, and accessible price points that punch far above their cost. With Gentle Monster now co-designing Google's upcoming AI smart glasses and Carin opening Tokyo and Bangkok lounges, the category is moving from accessory to identity. The next time you scroll past a Jennie airport photo or a BTS V concept teaser, look closely at the frames. The future of luxury eyewear is being designed in Seoul.
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