'We made charity shops look like designer stores'

Ashira Denab, who has black hair with a bluish tinge and is wearing a light blue sweater and dark red scarf standing next to Rick Hartley who has blonde hair, a dark beard and a blue hooded fleece. They are in front of a clothing rail inside a charity shop which has been decked out with Christmas decorations. Image source, Age UK
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Ashira Denab and Rick Hartley helped overhaul the charity shop in Northenden

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Charity shop manager Ashira Denab decided to completely abandon the traditional layout of her store in Greater Manchester for something resembling a designer shop.

The interior design graduate said she want the shop in Northenden to become the kind of place she would choose to visit, and as a result, customers have told "they have never been in a shop like it".

It is part of a growing trend to rebrand the shops which often dominate high streets depleted by established retailers facing spiralling overheads and fierce online competition.

Nora Masefield had no idea she was walking into a charity shop when she entered the doors of a newly-rebranded store in the square of the small historic market town of Poulton-le-Fylde in Lancashire where she lives.

A glass-fronted shop with contemporary grey window and door frames. A sign reading 'donations required' can be seen outside while customers can be seen milling around in the entranceway. Image source, Trinity Hospice
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Trinity Hospice has rebranded its shops with the new name of Attire

The shop, called Attire and run by Blackpool-based Trinity Hospice, has a prime spot for footfall and specialises in items like high-end menswear and books.

"It's quite urban. It's quite funky. So a lot of people like it because it doesn't look like a traditional charity shop," said Paul Guest, the hospice's head of retail and volunteer services.

An impressed Nora said, as she surveyed an interior which looked like it was set for a photo shoot for an upmarket style magazine, "I didn't know what it was at first, I was pleasantly surprised".

She added: "It looks nothing like the average charity shop - they used to look like jumble sales."

Mr Guest said the aim was to create an "urban masculine" look for the shop, with many props on display "to keep that ambience".

Nora Masefield has straw-coloured hair, a brown checked jacket with a yellow cardigan and caramel coloured sweater. She is standing in front of a shelf with red designer shoes, two metallic dogs and a fake skull.Image source, Paul Burnell/BBC
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Nora Masefield said she is "amazed" at her local charity shop

However student Sarah Bullough, 20, found it "a bit pricey for clothes although I know this area is pretty well off - my friends and I couldn't afford the clothes".

She said, while brandishing a copy of Four Weddings And A Funeral, "we come in for the CDs, DVDs or books and you can get some good bargains".

Shop manager Ash Kochar who has 20 years' experience in retail, said the focus on items such as books, CDs, DVDs and menswear is paying off.

"Although we are a charity shop, we have brought menswear and a bookshop to a town which doesn't have them any more - it's a totally different concept and people like it," he said.

Three CDs and a DVD in the hands of a customer at a charity shop. Image source, Paul Burnell/BBC
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Sarah Bullough said she only visits Attire for its CDs and DVDs

Mr Guest, who was the architect of the new look shop, explained why the focus had shifted to high-end men's clothes.

"Gentswear sells well, but the problem is we don't give it enough space because the best sellers are ladies because of the volume.

"Yet menswear has a better average selling price. We had a lot of customers over the years who say we never had enough."

Trinity Hospice responded by rebranding its stores under the Attire name, cherry-picking the best stock from its warehouse for shops for women in Lytham and St Annes and menswear in Poulton.

"We have made it a destination shop with the menswear and books. Takings are up and having good stock attracts better quality donated goods," he said.

'Bit artistic'

Rick Hartley, retail and income generation manager at Age UK, Manchester is a man on a similar mission to Mr Guest.

He said he was given a "free rein to be creative and a bit artistic" with his two shops - one in the desirable Greater Manchester suburb of Didsbury and the other in neighbouring Northenden.

Mr Hartley said he decided his new glass-fronted shop in the second location was to be his "statement building ".

Ms Denab, an interior design graduate, embraced the vision.

She said; "I just wanted to do something different to make it the kind of place I would like to visit.

"People tell us they like it and they have never been in a shop like it."

Ms Denab added: "My assistant and I are both in our 20s and we are so proud that profits have doubled as well."

Mr Hartley believes innovation is the future for charity shops but confessed: "I quite like cheap charity shops but what I've noticed is that the really cheap ones don't seem to last".

Brown shoes and a black fedora sit on a shelf above a clothes railing. Image source, Paul Burnell/BBC
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Paul Guest said his next charity shop revamp would be focused on a particular theme

Meanwhile, Mr Guest is getting excited over his latest creation in the village of Great Eccleston.

"We have to diversify because a lot of our customers are looking for the next best thing," he said.

In this case, the next best thing is a shop laid out around a particular theme.

"We have a standard shop at Great Eccleston but because of the way it is laid out, it's going to be like a Charles Dickens' old curiosity shop - I've had a preview and it looks amazing," he said.

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