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Retail & Consumer

Devon children's eyewear specialist secures British Business Bank funding

Exeter Eyewear designs adjustable glasses frames for children including those with craniofacial disorders such as Down Syndrome

Rob Barrow has set up children's glasses specialists Exeter Eyewear, in Exeter Science Park, with help from the South West Investment Fund(Image: Theo Moye)

A Devon-based eyewear specialist that designs adjustable glasses frames for children including those with craniofacial disorders such as Down Syndrome has secured funding to grow the business.

Exeter Eyewear, which is based at Exeter Science Park, is among the first companies to secure finance from the British Business Bank’s South West Investment Fund.

The £31,000 loan from SWIG Finance as part of the South West Investment Fund is part of a growth package worth £57,000. It will be used by Exeter Eyewear to support the creation of a new range of children’s glasses frames.

Exeter Eyewear is also planning to make a "significant investment" in digital resources as part of its growth strategy to drive innovation in design, production and marketing, it said.

The company is owned by Rob Barrow, who has more than 20 years of experience in the eyewear sector and has been recognised for his work helping young people see better by the Parliamentary Trust as part of the NHS’s 75th anniversary.

He said: “The assurance of additional manufacture quantities and cash reserves has opened the doors to larger-scale business in our favour. We have now been able to take our prototype models to a major º£½ÇÊÓÆµ provider, who has fully backed our product to the extent of taking their own products out of manufacture.”

Jody Tableporter, director º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and regional funds at the British Business Bank, said: “We’re delighted the investment from the South West Investment Fund enables Exeter Eyewear to scale up and start production of more than 4,000 specially designed children’s frames. That’s good news for the business and great news for children who require this specialist eyewear.”

SWIG’s Rachael Taylor added: “Rob’s passion for the project, a strong concept and design purpose, as well as his experience, were clear indicators this business was not only an innovative idea, but one that will improve the daily lives of many children.”