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How free eye care helped Big Issue vendor John get back to drawing

Swansea vendor John Williams has sketched since his schooldays, but outdated glasses left his artwork — and daily life — increasingly difficult. Through Specsavers’ partnership with Big Issue, free eye care helped bring his vision, confidence and creativity back into focus

Image: Exposure Photo Agency

Big Issue vendor John Williams is an artist. Pencil drawings mostly; often still lifes worked up from photographs, though he’ll have a go at chalks and charcoal too. He’s been at it since school, where he came out with a good grade in O Level art, and he comes back to it whenever life lets him.

“It takes my mind off the worries of normal living,” he says. “It settles my head down, which these days is a good thing.”

John sells the magazine outside the Co-op in Killay, Swansea, where he’s been for five years. Before that he was in Weston-super-Mare. All told, he’s been a vendor for around 17 years. Drawing has been the constant. He sits at home with a coffee and music in the background, working from a photograph. He’s stubborn about portraits, which don’t always come off, but in still life he can lose hours.

Struggling to see

John has worn glasses for more than 20 years, but keeping them up to date had become more and more of a problem. Eye tests he could just about manage. The glasses afterwards were a different matter.

“I’d still be using old glasses that were four years out of date,” he says, “because I could afford the eye test, but not the glasses.”

The cost of being unable to see properly added up in other ways: blurred vision, eyes that ached, headaches that wouldn’t shift.

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

“When my eyes start aching, I know it’s time to try and get a new pair.”

Without them, the everyday business of selling the magazine got harder. Counting change. Checking dates. Writing a letter. And the art, of course.

“Without the glasses it would just be a scribble.”

Image: Exposure Photo Agency

The fix

When a Specsavers pop-up clinic was held at the Big Issue Cardiff office, John went along. The team tested his eyes and sent him away with three pairs of glasses: one for reading, one for distance, and a spare.

“When I had them done they were smiling and helpful,” he says. “It helped me break the cycle a bit, get back into my art, get myself back into normal living again.”

Since November 2022, Specsavers’ partnership with Big Issue has offered all vendors free eye tests, glasses and ear care, with no fixed address required, no paperwork and no cost. The Charity VIP scheme now extends that same care to anyone experiencing homelessness, walk-in or by appointment, at any Specsavers store.

For John, it means the headaches have eased, the customers come into focus, and the pencil moves the way it’s supposed to.

He says: “Big Issue and Specsavers together are a winning team.”

FInd out more about Specsavers Charity VIP scheme.

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