Recent literature has dealt with the history and etiology of pseudoxanthoma elasticum and angioid streaks of the retina rather extensively, so that details in this respect will be omitted here. To date seventeen cases of the combined diseases have been reported in the literature, and in no case have photographs of the fundus been presented.1 Artists' drawings can scarcely give a true reproduction of the pathologic picture. The case reported here presents the typical clinical picture of each disease, and the ocular changes are verified by stereophotographs. REPORT OF CASE Miss W., aged 27, had vision of 6/60 in the right eye and 6/10 in the left eye on July 17, 1933. Four weeks previously the left eyeball was forcibly struck by a tennis ball. About two weeks later central vision became blurred in this eye. Vision in the right eye had been very poor for twenty years.