But it isn’t just rare finds or affordable items ellenor’s King Street shop offers. It’s a wide smile, good conversation, and personalised service – from one of the most experienced retail assistants in the business.
We’re talking about Janet Hughes, who this year celebrates an impressive milestone: her 25th year volunteering in ellenor’s King Street charity shop.
87-year-old Janet began her volunteering journey in 1998, following in the footsteps of her husband, Harry – a nurse who’d been volunteering at ellenor since 1990. Harry’s role? Driving around the local area, picking up important equipment from hospitals and running other errands for the Kent and Bexley-based hospice charity: which provides care and support to local people of all ages – and their families – living with life-limiting illnesses.
Soon, Janet – not wanting to miss out on all the fun – began accompanying Harry on his rounds. (The fact that Janet’s help meant her husband could be back home in time for lunch was a big plus for him, too.)
But it wasn’t until the day that Janet walked, by chance, into ellenor’s King Street shop – now a quarter of a century ago – that things really got going.
“They’d just opened,” Janet explains, “and chatting to the manager there I could see she was all on her own. It was Christmas time, and all the volunteers had deserted her; she was desperate. That day, I started volunteering here – and have been ever since!”
Janet has always loved the rhythms and routines of the ellenor shop floor – always savoured the hustle and bustle, the flow of customers and new people.
“I like putting things in order,” she says. “Picking items up and placing them in the right area of the shop; working at the till; and helping customers piece together lovely outfits.”
At times, Janet has even taken her work home with her: getting stuck in with a needle and thread to sew buttons back onto shirts and give ripped or overly worn items a new lease of life. And, having been operating a till for about a decade longer than the first contactless cards started showing up, she’s a dab hand at cash handling.
But ever since Harry passed away three years ago, her role at ellenor’s Gravesend charity shop has taken on even greater significance for people-person Janet. In the shop – where Janet works two days a week – she’s found solace in the camaraderie of customers and her colleagues.