H.G. Wells' Opera Glasses | |
---|---|
Origin |
Charles Wells |
Type |
Opera glasses |
Effects |
Invisibility revealer or invisibility of self |
Downsides |
Permanent invisibility of self if used too long |
Activation |
Looking through |
Collected by |
Samantha Brennan and Merle Vennuto |
Section |
Scientia-732T |
Aisle |
|
Shelf |
907.005 |
Date of Collection |
September 12, 1963 |
[Source] |
Origin[]
Invented by Charles Wells, brother to Warehouse 12 Agent H.G. Wells, not long after he wrote "The Invisible Man".
Effects[]
When looking through the Glasses as they should be viewed, they allow the user to see anything invisible. However, looking through them in reverse causes the user to become invisible. This effect becomes permanent if the user stays invisible for more than five hours.
Collection and Storage[]
Warehouse 13 Agents Samantha Brennan and Merle Vennuto were called to an Opera House in Massachusetts where women claimed they were being groped or raped by an invisible man. After Agent Brennan experienced groping, she managed to use her Tesla on the man, who dropped the Opera Glasses and returned to visibility.
Although the artifact did not belong directly to former Warehouse 12 Agent H.G. Wells, it was decided that the Opera Glasses would fit well in the area with all of her gadgets.