Mesh Contacts
Mesh lenses cover the whole eye — pupil included — with a fine net pattern. The result reads as truly empty or infected eyes, which nothing else replicates. They also reduce vision, so read the short guide below before you buy.
What Mesh Actually Looks (and Sees) Like
Unlike whiteout lenses that leave your pupil clear, mesh covers everything with a micro-net. From the outside: void. From the inside: like looking through a screen door — you see shapes and light, not detail. That's the trade-off that makes the effect possible.
How Pros Wear Mesh
One eye only is the most common setup: full effect in photos, functional vision from the other eye. For full-mesh looks, bring a guide friend, keep sessions to 2–4 hours, and never drive, cycle or take stairs unassisted. Plan shots first, socialize after removal.
Color Choices
White mesh = classic possession/undead. Red mesh = infection and demon looks. Black mesh = void eyes, extremely unsettling on camera. All print opaque enough to read on dark irises. Want the effect without vision loss? Check whiteout lenses instead — solid color, clear pupil.
Care and Ordering
HEMA hydrogel, standard cleaning rules apply: fresh solution, clean hands, never sleep in them. Plano (0.00) only; U.S. orders require prescription verification even for plano. Standard delivery 16–26 days — for Halloween, order by late September. Browse the full Halloween collection for more effects.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you see through mesh contacts?
Partially — mesh covers the pupil with a fine net, so you see light and shapes rather than detail, like looking through a screen door. Many wearers use mesh in one eye only to keep functional vision.
How long can I wear mesh lenses?
Keep sessions to 2–4 hours. They're photo and scene lenses, not all-day wear — remove them as soon as your shoot or party segment is done.
Are mesh contacts safe?
For short costume sessions with proper hygiene, yes — but never drive or navigate stairs unassisted in them, and remove immediately at any burning or persistent discomfort.
White, red or black mesh — which should I get?
White for possession/undead looks, red for infection and demon effects, black for pure void eyes. All are printed dense enough to show on dark irises.
Do mesh contacts need a prescription?
They're plano (0.00) only, but in the U.S. all contact lenses — including costume lenses — legally require a valid prescription. We support the standard verification process.

















