FWIW, my Add is 0. I only have numbers for Sphere, Cylinder, and Axis. Turns out my Sphere is -2.50, not 2.25 like I thought.
I've advocated for anti-reflective coatings for years. They make a huge difference. I'm not familiar with the latest Crizal coating as it's been a few years since I've bought glasses. My optical dr prefers to use Zeiss lenses for glasses but I can't say they are better or worse than the others.
I don't think there's a whole lot of difference in the lenses from the established brands/players.
Essilor (the makers of Crizal) is the lenses and coatings section of the
Optical Borg. They're half of
EssilorLuxottica and have been steadily been acquiring other players in the market.
Luxottica owns Oakley, Ray-Ban, and many more brands. Luxottica also own Sunglass Hut, Pearle Vision, Lenscrafter, Sears Optical, Target Optical, and other retail outlets. There are reports of questionably ethical/legal business practices and techniques to make all that happen. Apparently you will be assimilated!
On the sunglasses front, I went back to the local Oakley Store this afternoon and bought/ordered myself prescription Oakley Custom Flak 2.0 XL's. Custom means you can pick any combination of frame color/finish, the O icon color/finish, & the ear sock color instead of just a few pre-selected combinations. Buying at the Oakley store was a fair bit cheaper than any online retailer I found for the same thing. They were $419.75 vs. $485 @ SportRX or $488 @ FramesDirect. The SportRX and FramesDirect price aren't a custom frame, but my customization is rather minor. I got a matte black O icon on the sides of the frame instead of a polished black one on the standard SKU. Apparently Oakley has a 25% discount on prescription sunglasses in store if you're not using insurance. That's what they told me last week when I first stopped in last week and they took the 25% right off today. I never found any mention or chatter of that discount online, but I'm not complaining.
They also used some pretty slick measurement & fitting jig that clipped onto a Flak 2.0 XL with clear lenses and had reference points on the jig. The frames + jig go on your face and they take a picture of your face after lining up the reference points in an app on their iPad. From the picture the app locates your pupils relative to the frame and reference points and how the frame sit on your face to derive all the measurement necessary beyond the prescription to make the lenses just right for the wearer. The operator can make adjustments from the photo to make sure everything is just right. You're not going to get that ordering online by just entering your Rx and a Pd.
They're supposed to be ready for pickup in 7-10 business days.