Colourful, practical patching
Our Kay Fun Patch range of high-quality, medical fabric eye patches ensures safe, comfortable, and effective occlusion by offering specific designs for babies, children, and adults.
Despite being a small UK-based business, we’re the largest producer of them, and we’re proud to impact the lives of nearly 40,000 children annually.


We use skin-friendly, breathable fabrics, and each one is hand-sewn with care.
But our eye patches aren’t just comfortable and high quality, they’re eco-friendly too. Proudly 100% UK-made, we’ve had a low carbon footprint since 1998.
Plain Patches

Our Plain Fun Patches come in a selection of brand-new colours with a 100% inner cotton lining.
Available for babies, children and adults.
How to attach our patches
All our patches are symmetrical in shape and fit most types of glasses frames with or without nose pieces. Each patch attaches with elastic straps, and/or button holes, depending on the patch and the glasses.

Magic Patches

Our Kay Magic Patches are inconspicuous, adhesive patches for glasses. They are most suitable for amblyopia and intractable diplopia treatment.
Once attached to the lens the patches obscure all form to the wearer but allow light into the eye. They’re less obtrusive for the wearer than a blackout patch and the eye behind the patch remains visible to the observer.

Resources for practitioners
Click here to access a collection of free tools, charts and guides to help make it easier for eye specialists to get the most out of our products.
If you have any other suggestions or requests, feel free to contact us.
Picture search for amblyopia therapy
Try giving these picture searches to your patients undergoing patching treatment.
They are aimed at pre-school children and differentiated in visual difficulty in size, complexity and contrast levels. Each level includes two or three stages, so improvement can be monitored with time. At the beginning of each stage, there is a matching frame which shows the toys we have hidden.
The Fun Picture Searches can be printed but are best viewed on a PC or tablet where the images can be zoomed in or out to adjust the size to suit. They can also be repeated and increased in difficulty by zooming out.