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Edinburgh entrepreneur launches a naked cleaning firm, charging £75 an hour to blitz in the buff

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Edinburgh entrepreneur launches a naked cleaning firm, charging £75 an hour to blitz in the buff
News

News

Edinburgh entrepreneur launches a naked cleaning firm, charging £75 an hour to blitz in the buff

2019-04-13 21:05 Last Updated At:21:05

Victoria’s 15-strong army of staff are bringing Spring cleaning with a saucy difference to Scotland.

When an Edinburgh entrepreneur launched a cleaning firm, she gave a whole new meaning to stripped back style.

Soon the Scottish capital’s movers and shakers were calling up Victoria Murphy’s firm, Glimmer, to help with buffing-up the silverware … in the buff.

For Victoria, 25, employs a 15-strong army of naked cleaners – including three men – who charge between £55 and £75 an hour for their service, depending on the level of nudity.

And before she started recruiting, Victoria first tested the water – giving Edinburgh’s front rooms a thorough going over, wearing nothing but her birthday suit.

The singleton, who lives in the city with her pet Daschund, Louis, said: “I didn’t want to put my staff into any situation I had not experienced myself.”

With a degree in events management and a strong work ethic, Victoria was keen to start a business with a quirky unique selling point and began considering the adult service sector.

Then working as a beautician, she first toyed with the idea  of starting a webcam work business – though she wouldn’t be getting in front of the camera herself – but then stumbled across an American company offering a naked cleaning service and the idea for Glimmer was born.

“I knew I wanted something in that adult niche which would be fun and risqué but not extreme,” she said.  “We are not an escort service. What we offer is fun and flirty. When I did it for a while, I had a laugh and nothing untoward happened.”

Glimmer offers three tiers of adult cleaning – with a service in lingerie or underwear starting at £55 per hour,  topless cleaning costing £65 an hour and totally naked cleaning at £75 for the hour.

“None of my staff ever have to do anything they don’t feel comfortable with,” Victoria added. “The client will choose the option they prefer and I will match the cleaner to that choice.”

The naked dress code has certainly done nothing to deter prospective employees, with Victoria receiving over 100 applications last time she advertised for staff.

“The most important thing is that someone has professional cleaning experience,” she said. “Then they need to have a good personality, because engaging with the client, chatting to them and feeling comfortable being naked is all part of what makes someone right for this role.”

But Victoria admits that their 20 regular clients and 15 who book an occasional clean, have completely shattered her preconceptions about the type of person she imagined would use the service.

“I thought we’d get mostly professional working men in their forties but actually, the clients are much more diverse,” she said. “We’ve had some as young as 30 and others in their 80s. Many of them live alone and a lot of the older gentleman are quite lonely, so it’s important the experience is fun and that the cleaners like chatting.

“We have male cleaners available but women asking for men isn’t something that comes up a lot. We’re definitely trying to work on that side of things and build it up.”

She continued: “When I’m recruiting, I’m not worried about what people look like –  as everyone has a different idea of what’s attractive – but they do need to be presentable and body confident.”

Despite its saucy theme, Victoria said her friends and family have been very supportive about her business.

“They understand this is my baby” she said. “I do spend a lot of time explaining to people that this is a serious cleaning business, too. We clean to a very high standard. Most people ask what the client does while the cleaner is working.”

“They imagine they just sit there while the cleaner puts on a show, but that’s not what we do,” Victoria added: “A lot of clients have never done anything like this before and are often quite shy. So the cleaner will chat and engage with them, but, most importantly, they’ll get on with the job of cleaning the house.”

Social media – especially Instagram – has played a key role in advertising Glimmer.

“We can’t just put leaflets through people’s doors, as there may be families living there and we don’t want to offend anyone, so we use social media and also advertise in free listings where we can,” said Victoria.

Running her business single-handedly, Victoria has high ambitions for Glimmer and is now recruiting naked cleaners in Glasgow and Aberdeen, saying that once she has conquered Scotland, she will clean up across the rest of the UK.

“I do want to expand across the whole country but for now, we’re expanding by offering Naked Party Hosting,” she said.

Glimmer is also exploring the idea of offering Naked Handymen, which Victoria believes will appeal to more women, while her current client list is mostly male.

“I am still working part-time as a beautician doing nails mostly, but I am determined to make a success of this business, so I do work really hard,” she said.

“I do socialise with my friends and go out and I love taking Louis for a long walk, but I run every aspect of the business and so, truthfully, I have very little free time outside work.”

For information, visit www.getglimmer.co.uk or follow @getglimmer_ on Instagram

WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge on Friday struck down another of President Donald Trump's executive orders targeting law firms.

U.S. District Judge Loren AliKhan ruled that the order against the firm of Susman Godfrey was unconstitutional and must be permanently blocked.

The order was the latest ruling to reject Trump's efforts to punish law firms for legal work he does not like and for employing attorneys he perceives as his adversaries. Susman Godfrey suggested that it had drawn Trump's ire at least in part because it represented Dominion Voting Systems in the voting machine company's defamation lawsuit against Fox News over false claims surrounding the 2020 presidential election. The suit ended in a massive settlement.

Other judges in recent weeks have blocked similar orders against the firms of Jenner & Block, Perkins Coie and WilmerHale. The orders have sought to impose similar sanctions, including the suspension of security clearances of attorneys and the restriction of access to federal buildings.

“The order was one in a series attacking firms that had taken positions with which President Trump disagreed. In the ensuing months, every court to have considered a challenge to one of these orders has found grave constitutional violations and permanently enjoined enforcement of the order in full," AliKhan wrote. “Today, this court follows suit, concluding that the order targeting Susman violates the U.S. Constitution and must be permanently enjoined.”

In a statement, the firm called the ruling “a resounding victory for the rule of law and the right of every American to be represented by legal counsel without fear of retaliation.”

“We applaud the Court for declaring the administration’s order unconstitutional. Our firm is committed to the rule of law and to protecting the rights of our clients without regard to their political or other beliefs. Susman Godfrey’s lawyers and staff live these values every day,” the statement said.

Other major firms have sought to avert orders by preemptively reaching settlements that require them, among other things, to collectively dedicate hundreds of millions of dollars in free legal services in support of causes the Trump administration says it supports.

President Donald Trump listens during a briefing with the media, Friday, June 27, 2025, at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

President Donald Trump listens during a briefing with the media, Friday, June 27, 2025, at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

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