• 6 months ago
Maxine Duffus is closing her Sheffield dress shop after 39 years. She was also Sheffield's first black bus driver in 1983.
Transcript
00:00I'm not going to lie, I'm going to really really miss it because it's been part of my life, it's
00:06like I call it my third child and I'm not trying to cry right now but I think I will cry once I'm
00:14at home and it's the first day of working mobile. I've been here since 1985 and I'm going to be
00:22closing shortly on the 31st of July and then I'm going to move on to mobile alterations.
00:31I'm going to say that I've enjoyed meeting so many different people,
00:36not even just people but the generations of families and that is what I'm going to miss the
00:42most. I do enjoy what I do, I'm not going to lie, it's not fun and games and it's a survival process
00:51sometimes instead of a thriving process so hopefully slowing down a bit I'll be able to do
00:59more personal meetings. This is where my love of fashion started when I was 21 and I took a job
01:08on the buses to save money to get fabric to make dresses to do fashion shows and
01:16that's the beginning of the journey. The journey then came when I came to the shop
01:22and now the journey is carrying on and I'm going to be doing it mobile.
01:27Being a bus driver was quite daunting because I always used to get a double stare off some of the
01:33passengers. They probably thought I was too young to be driving such a big,
01:39operating such a big instrument and I enjoyed it to a certain degree but it wasn't my first
01:48passion. My first passion was to have my own boutique and I succeeded in that for the last 39
01:53and a half years.

Recommended