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Caroline Archer is a Partner in UKType (www.uktype.com) and blogs here about this year’s Plus International Design Festival exhibition, part-sponsored by media partner 4Talent.

Plus International Design Festival

Plus International Design Festival

There’s not much to queue for on River Street, especially in November, but for four days last week cars were doubled parked, coaches arrived in convoy and expectant delegates lined the pavement outside the newly opened Fazeley Studios. They’d traveled to Eastside from across Europe and the Middle East, from London and around the UK and had even found their way from far-flung corners of Deritend. River Street sprang to life.
The reason for this influx was the Plus International Design Festival, which had returned to Birmingham for its third year.
This year the exhibitions were disparate and unconventional. Agencies and freelancers exhibited work that was unproven and untried. Two of my favourite pieces included Shanghai-based WOKmedia who showed Between Lines, a three dimensional, flexible typographic ‘bookshelf’; whilst type designer, Timothy Donaldson produced Plus non-Plus: a vast canvas covered in letters so large they had to be formed by the whole body with the assistance of scaffolding. Alongside established exhibitors such as Clusta and Fluid was Smile a trio of exciting young newcomers to the local design scene who are definitely ones to watch for in the future.
The lecture series is always the jewel-in-the-crown of Plus. This year an international line-up of speakers - both known and unknown - held the audience over three days during which time they delivered a series of informative and inspiring talks. In particular Jonathan Barnbrook commanded an audience that would have been the envy of the Guillemots and which roused as much passion.
However, the Festival was not simply about watching and listening - it was also about doing, and there were plenty of workshops to keep the visitors entertained, and the ever popular walking tours ran to capacity as visitors explored the typographic complexity of Birmingham’s urban environment under the able guidance of local historian, Ben Waddington.
But what was the purpose of all this activity?
Plus is not about acquiring clients or pecuniary gain: it had a more significant and richer purpose than simple commercialism. To this end, it was edifying to seeing a stone carver from Devon, chatting with the creative director from a London agency who was talking a young graduate from BCU who had engaged the attention of an eminent type designer. This, in microcosm, was what Plus is about: the great and the good mixing with the great unknown in parity.

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Another week, another festival microblog. The weekend just gone saw 4Talent head to Birmingham’s Custard Factory to bring you Twitter updates from the small but noisily formed Supersonic, featuring a dream line-up of sludgey, grungey, kraut-rocking noise for those who like their music uncompromisingly large of sound and eclectic of source. For those who couldn’t make it, we’ll be rolling out our interviews with teen screamers Rolo Tomassi, local lads Einstellung and the ever popular Fuck Buttons on 4Talent Central over the coming week.

But forget Supersonic for a moment and cast your mind back all of three weeks to grande dame of festivals Glastonbury, where amidst the excitement of secret gigs from Franz Ferdinand, being roped in at the last minute to interview James Blunt for Oxfam, and doing our bit for the planet by taking tea to Oxfam volunteers in a battered jeep, we just about found the time to run a live Twitter competition from the festival site.

We’re now pleased to be able to announce the winner of said competition, who with the best answer to our Oxfam-sponsored question “What gets your knickers in a twist?” will be joining us at sold-out Bestival in September to interview an artist for a 4Talent podcast. The winner, 19 year old Frankie Ward, persuaded us with an answer we couldn’t agree with more. So what, exactly, gets Frankie’s knickers in a twist? That would be: “Interviewers asking bands who they’re doing, not what they’re doing.”

Currently on a work experience placement with BBC Kent, Frankie is an aspiring journalist whose festival experiences this summer have already included standing in for teen folk sensation Laura Marling (pictured below) on stage with the Mystery Jets at Lounge on the Farm. Watch this space for her 4Talent Bestival podcast in September…


Laura Marling at Glastonbury getting her knickers in a twist.

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Words: Pete Ashton
Illustration: Raymond Weekes

'hello' by raymond weekes

Hi, I’m Pete Ashton and I’ve been messing about with weblogs for years now. After The Guardian went and gave one of my blogs a fancy media award Nick at 4Talent magazine asked if I’d write this masterclass on running a weblog. Since the blog in question was Created in Birmingham (now run by Chris Unitt), linking up Birmingham’s creative and cultural communities, and that I do a fair bit of consulting and evangelising about the wonderful world of blogging, it seemed like a no-brainer really. So here goes.

The thing is I write for blogs, not those strange magazine things. How do you link to other stuff in a magazine? Where do the comments go? I’m sure it’s a perfectly valid form of communication but I’m really not at home there. I’m more comfortable on a blog: you wouldn’t ask a filmmaker to communicate through the medium of interpretive dance, would you?

Next in the series: the social internet >

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