
Plymouth entrepreneur honoured by King for braille business
He added: "It's all been a bit of a surprise, it all happened because I was unemployed for so long, I went to the job centre and said 'all I need is one piece of kit so I can set up my own business'."He said one phone call from the advisor later and he was in touch with the King's Trust (formerly the Prince's Trust), who helped him get set up.He said his business All Things Dotty was about helping visually impaired people to "see the world with their fingers"."It's opened a whole new world for visually impaired people," he added. He said he was inspired initially by his own challenges reading greetings cards."I got frustrated...people would get me birthday and Christmas cards and I couldn't read them."I'd be hovering my phone over it to try and read it and in the end family would read them to me which was great, but I could only read them that once."After searching for a solution, he found a gap in the market, and started to produce "tactile artwork".Describing "big A4 things folded in half", he said the business had since been finessed, with personalised braille greetings cards featuring a range of designs now on sale, as well as colouring books, artwork, menus, and braille tuition.
'Support is magical'
Mr Hulcoop said he started using an embosser at home to create the cards, but he now has an office.He said he had also completed a business diploma at a residential college "geared up" for visually impaired students."Look at me now compared to five years ago," he added."I always knew I wanted to be a braille teacher or do something in braille. I was led to believe the market was too small but now I know it's very very big," he added. "I just want people to recognise the importance of braille."Having a braille menu promotes that independence, you can say to people 'you're welcome here'. Thanking the customers and restaurants in Plymouth who supported him in the early days, he added: "Still getting support is magical for me as a person."Mike Hogan, from Plymouth, who is a mentor with the King's Trust, said: "Brandon is so inspirational in that if he comes up against an obstacle he will always try to find ways around that obstacle to complete things himself before asking for help."Sometimes he does ask and I'm only too pleased to help. He's always treated his disability as an ability in that it's not holding him back at all."He likes to show other people if he can achieve this why can't they and he's all about accessibility and inclusion."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
17 minutes ago
- BBC News
Why Liverpool's spending spree has piled pressure and scrutiny on Slot
Arne Slot arrived at Liverpool last summer without fanfare into an atmosphere of uncertainty following his iconic predecessor Jurgen Klopp's shock decision to leave 46-year-old Dutch coach built a fine reputation with successes at Feyenoord, but was an unknown quantity to many Liverpool supporters and untested in the Premier understated persona was in sharp contrast to the charismatic Klopp, whose departure shaped expectations to the extent that a top-four finish and continued Champions League football was the widely accepted target for Liverpool's pressure of being Liverpool manager is ever-present - but early expectation management in the new era meant levels were adjusted forward a remarkable 12 months and Slot's Liverpool start the new campaign as Premier League champions, strolling to the title with a 10-point margin and four games to spare, barely threatened from Christmas should have been a summer of celebration has been lived under the shadow of the tragic death of much-loved forward Diogo Jota, killed in a car crash, and the incident in which many Liverpool fans were injured at the title the purely sporting context, however, the landscape has shifted dramatically for the club - and with it comes increasing pressure and scrutiny on Slot to deliver more barely dipping into his spending pot last summer, Slot now has an array of new talent at his disposal following a remarkable summer spending spree that could yet comfortably top £300m - making the Reds firm favourites to retain their have signed Florian Wirtz, one of Europe's hottest properties, in a £116m deal from Bayer Leverkusen, a new pair of full-backs in Milos Kerkez and Jeremie Frimpong for a combined £70m from Bayer Leverkusen and Bournemouth respectively, then added Eintracht Frankfurt striker Hugo Ekitike in a deal that could be worth £ to this the possibility that Crystal Palace captain and defensive lynchpin Marc Guehi could sign for £35m is growing. They have also secured a £26m move for 18-year-old centre-back Giovanni Leoni from may yet add Newcastle United's £150m-rated rebel striker Alexander Isak to their ranks, which effectively means Slot cannot afford to fail to deliver a trophy and a challenge for the biggest prizes - namely another title and the Champions League. Can cool Slot handle the heat? Slot will know better than anyone that he, as well as his expensively reassembled side, will be viewed through a completely different prism this are now the hunted rather than the hunters. A campaign without a trophy would be regarded as failure, while rivals Arsenal, Chelsea and Manchester City in particular, have also strengthened heavily to ensure there is no repeat of last season's one-team title has shown a cool head from day one, barely losing his composure, apart from at the conclusion of an incendiary 2-2 Merseyside derby draw at Goodison Park in February, when he was one of four sent off after the final Liverpool and England midfielder Danny Murphy is confident Slot can deal with the added pressure, telling BBC Sport: "I don't see Slot being the kind of manager who gets too preoccupied with pressure. He looks very calm. He seems to be very articulate and knows how to handle different situations." He added: "Slot's temperament throughout last season was pretty exquisite. There were not too many times where he seemed rattled."I know you could say it is easier to be calm and articulate when you are winning games, but even when they lost to Paris St-Germain in the Champions League, or when they lost to Newcastle United in the Carabao Cup final, he still remained really calm and controlled."He was good with his words, said the right things. There was still a real clear focus from him, so I don't see him being too affected by the outside noise. He has shown he can cope with that."Expectation has changed, no doubt, at Liverpool there is always a certain amount of expectation anyway, but now he has won the league and spent most of the season playing phenomenal football."That high bar is set by Slot now, and an expectation to a degree, but there is also a reality around a group of new players at any time."Whether you have just won the league or have finished sixth, there is still going to be an adaptation period where those players need to grow into their roles and become comfortable in those positions." Is Slot's Liverpool now a team in transition? Slot has been at pains to point out that Liverpool's incomings have been accompanied by departures, with Trent Alexander-Arnold leaving for Real Madrid on a free transfer, forwards Luis Diaz and Darwin Nunez sold to Bayern Munich and Al-Hilal respectively, while defender Jarell Quansah made the journey in the opposition direction to Wirtz and Frimpong to join Bayer is an unusual amount of churn for champions, showing in a disjointed performance in the Community Shield loss to Crystal Palace, which saw Frimpong, Kerkez, Wirtz and Ekitike start in a performance suggesting a work in progress, lacking last season's calm and absence of midfielder Ryan Gravenberch, suspended for Friday's opener at home to Bournemouth, hit hard as Liverpool looked a team of too many attacking parts without a solid midfield base, exposed too must find a way to fit Wirtz – so effective across the line of attacking positions as well as from deeper positions - into his plans. How will this impact on the smooth-running midfield of last season, where Gravenberch, Dominik Szoboszlai and Alexis Mac Allister were a well-oiled machine? Murphy said: "I think Liverpool fans, and probably Slot himself, will be aware that there might be some bumps in the road because you are talking about really young players coming in into an environment they have never been used to, with that expectation of the Liverpool public, with that magnifying glass on every performance."That is something those players won't have had before. No disrespect, but at Leverkusen or Frankfurt it is not quite the same pressure, but the Liverpool fans will know that and will understand that will be new for some of the players."Liverpool started last season really well. This was mainly obviously to do with the quality of players they had, but also there wasn't any integration of new players. They all knew each other."It is different this time. There is also the pressure of being at a club where you are expected to win every week. We are in this kind of grey area where we are waiting to see who fits in smoothly, who adapts the most quickly, who gains momentum the quickest." Liverpool fans trust Slot to oversee change Any doubts about Slot's ability to succeed a figure as beloved as Klopp were swept away in the euphoria of the club's 20th title, where his calm command and tactical shrewdness kept the best of his predecessor's "Heavy Metal" football while making Liverpool more controlled, less likely to fall victims to self-created status on The Kop means he had earned their trust to manage the said: "Liverpool fans probably didn't expect what happened last season. They are aware there has been a turnaround of quite a few players, so if the season doesn't start brilliantly smoothly, with them winning every game, they will still stay right behind Slot because they know what he is capable of. He has credit in the bank. He hardly put a foot wrong in his first season."


BBC News
17 minutes ago
- BBC News
Council to return to court over future of demolished pub
A council is to return to court to fight for the future of a listed 18th Century pub that was demolished without consent by the owners, who have been ordered to rebuild the historical grade II listed Punchbowl Inn near Hurst Green in Lancashire was bulldozed by Donelan Trading Ltd after the group ignored a Ribble Valley Borough Council decision in June council took the firm to the High Court last year, seeking an injunction requiring them to comply with a listed building enforcement notice and rebuild the pub to its original plan. Donelan Trading Ltd, which has been contacted for comment, has missed several deadlines to find contractors for the rebuild. The latest missed deadline came on Tuesday, after the firm had been granted three more months in May to find a contractor for the council will be able to go back to the court to ask them again to take the pub was demolished in 2021, five people were later fined more than £20,000 for their role in knocking it owners had argued that the building had become unsafe and was being targeted by Trading had submitted various plans for the site to the council before 2021 and although some were refused, a holiday lodge park was approved with Valley Borough Council says its unable to comment at this stage due to legal proceedings, but it is not clear when the case will go back before the High BBC has contacted Donelan Trading Ltd on multiple occasions for comment and has so far received no response. Listen to the best of BBC Radio Lancashire on Sounds and follow BBC Lancashire on Facebook, X and Instagram. You can also send story ideas to and via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.


BBC News
20 minutes ago
- BBC News
Lake District tourist congestion charge 'could ease parking problems'
A congestion charge for visitors to the Lake District could help ease parking problems in the national park, a think tank leader has parking in some areas can stop buses, lorries and emergency vehicles getting past at busy Murison, chief executive of the Northern Powerhouse Partnership, said the revenue could be used to fund better public transport and it "might be one of the answers we need to consider".Local businessman Mike Anderton said he disagreed as it would "put tourists off". Mr Murison, whose group looks at ways to boost economic growth in the north of England, said it was important that people could travel to the Lakes "much more easily by public transport", offering an alternative to devolution advocate said a future Cumbria mayor could request the power to impose a congestion charge."Asking those visitors who may continue to drive their cars to pay a congestion charge, I think that might be one of the answers we need to consider," he said. 'Car park needed' The idea has been criticised by Mr Anderton, who owns the Swinside Inn in the Newlands Valley"I don't think it's a good idea, I think it's going to put tourists off," he said."A lot of people in the local area make their living off tourists." He said too many people parking on the road near Cat Bells fell was a serious problem and had caused the local bus service to be cancelled multiple solution, he said, was to build a car Anderton has submitted a planning application to create one at Ullock Moss, after a previous proposal at the same site was Lake District National Park Authority (LDNPA) has also previously turned down plans for a permanent facility at Cupboard Field, where Mr Anderton operates a temporary car park for 28 days a year. Alan Ashby, an opponent of the Ullock Moss scheme from nearby Portinscale, said a car park would not solve the said it would lead to "more car visitors coming through the village" on their way to reach would lead to "more safety issues", he said, with vehicles squeezing through tight spaces to get past each other and parked Anderton said a car park would not attract more about the wider issue of parking in the Lake District, Emma Moody, a sustainable transport adviser for the LDNPA, said it was "really important we give people alternatives to driving."She said the authority had helped fund a shuttle bus in Wasdale and was encouraging visitors "to consider travelling by bus if it's convenient for them." Follow BBC Cumbria on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.