Wasson Kernow
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🗓Mon 14 Sep 2026 · 10:00 AM
📍Former Post Office, The Sorting Room
£40

... Rules for TITLE: - Clear and concise, 4-9 words. - Strip noise: governing bodies, sponsor names, "tickets", "booking", year numbers, round/event numbers. - Keep essence: what it is and where (place name) if not implied by venue. - Title-case proper nouns and event names; otherwise sentence case. - Don't invent details. So "Abstract Drawing with Peter Giles" is already decent. But venue is "Former Post Office, The Sorting Room" and tag says "stives" which is St Ives. I should include St Ives or the venue. The Sorting Room might not imply St Ives to everyone. But St Ives is a major Cornwall art town. So maybe: "Abstract Drawing with Peter Giles in St Ives" or "Abstract Drawing Workshop at The Sorting Room, St Ives". Let's check word count: "Abstract Drawing with Peter Giles in St Ives" is 8 words. That's good. Or "Abstract Drawing Workshop with Peter Giles in St Ives" is 9 words. The raw description says "Explore the art of Abstract Drawing" but doesn't explicitly say workshop. However tags include artclass. I could say "Abstract Drawing Class with Peter Giles in St Ives" (9 words). Or "Abstract Drawing with Peter Giles at The Sorting Room" (9 words). Since St Ives is more locally relevant and recognizable in Cornwall, and the venue is Former Post Office, The Sorting Room. Title-case proper nouns: Abstract Drawing with Peter Giles in St Ives. "Abstract Drawing" could be title case as it's the name/subject? The user says "Title-case proper nouns and event names; otherwise sentence case." So "Abstract drawing with Peter Giles in St Ives" or "Abstract Drawing with Peter Giles in St Ives". Since "Abstract Drawing" isn't a proper noun, maybe lower case? But it looks weird. Actually in event listings, the event title often capitalizes the main words. But the instruction says "Title-case proper nouns and event names; otherwise sentence case." So if the event name is "Abstract Drawing with Peter Giles", that's the event name. But I can adjust. Let's do: "Abstract drawing with Peter Giles in St Ives" (sentence case except proper nouns). That would be: Abstract drawing with Peter Giles in St Ives. That is 8 words. Good. Wait, the instruction: "Title-case proper nouns and event names; otherwise sentence case." So event name should be title case? It says title-case proper nouns AND event names. So event names get title case. Is "Abstract Drawing with Peter Giles" the event name? The raw title is that. But I'm rewriting. I think "Abstract Drawing with Peter Giles" is the event name, so title case. But then "in St Ives" has a proper noun. So: "Abstract Drawing with Peter Giles in St Ives". That's fine. Alternatively: "Abstract Drawing Class with Peter Giles, St Ives". But "class" is not in raw data, though implied by artclass tag and price. The instruction says don't invent details. Is "class" an invented detail? The tag is "artclass" and price is £40, so it's likely a class/workshop. But to be safe, maybe avoid "class" or "workshop" if not explicitly stated? The raw description says "Explore the art of Abstract Drawing". It doesn't say class. But the category is art and tags include artclass. I think "class" is a reasonable interpretation, but the safest is to stick to what is given: "Abstract Drawing with Peter Giles". However, including location is recommended. "Abstract Drawing with Peter Giles in St Ives" uses given info (Peter Giles, St Ives from tag). Venue is The Sorting Room / Former Post Office. St Ives is from tag. So that's safe. Word count: 4-9 words. "Abstract Drawing with Peter Giles in St Ives" = 8 words. Perfect. SHORT DESCRIPTION RULES: - ONE sentence, 12-25 words. - Capture the single most

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