The British re-tailored things bought at the sales and launched a successful fashion brand
years. Their story is quoted by The Sun.
According to the newspaper, the promoter of the nightclub Manuela Mosca lived with her family in a communal apartment in the Parson Cross criminal district, Sheffield. In 2014, a woman decided to buy things at sales and flea markets, and then alter them to her taste and resell them on social networks. The British woman's account gained popularity, and she began receiving orders from all over the country.
The success prompted Moscow to end her career at the club in order to concentrate on the launch and development of her own clothing brand, called Sorelle UK. Her husband, plasterer Jamie Smedley, supported his wife's idea and also quit his job as commercial director of the new company. Over the next three years, the couple managed to build their dream home and move into it from a communal apartment.
They are currently preparing to open their first store in the prestigious Meadowhall shopping center. “We could open in the Trafford center, but we are planning to grow into an international company and we want our headquarters to be located in Meadowhall,” Smedley said.
According to the man, his wife works 24 hours per day, even during flights to business meetings with an eight-month-old son in her arms. “What she is doing is incredible. It is a huge work, but her efforts were worth it, “he concluded.
In October, it was reported about sisters from Australia who began to sew bathing suits at home and earned tens of millions of rubles per year. The girls published pictures of the resulting sets on Instagram, and in a short time they found a large number of buyers. Thus, they launched their own brand Leni Swims.