The building's landlord, Electric Group, has been in dispute with its tenants since it served an eviction notice in 2022, planning to run the business itself.
Caroline Jones, 56, from Harpenden, Hertfordshire, began, in 2015 in memory of her mother Mary Benson, who died from breast cancer.
She wore clothes from theand posted her outfits on social media.Marking 10 years is the "obvious next step" for her, she said, and she will post her 2025 pictures alongside the corresponding image from 2015.
Mrs Jones' mother, who died in October 2014, had been a volunteer at the charity's Harpenden shop for 13 years.Mother-of-three Ms Jones started volunteering as a window dresser soon after her mother died, and on New Year's Eve 2014 decided on a campaign to honour her memory.
She hoped to raise £1,000 in a year, but her daily posts became so popular she increased her fundraising target and raised about £70,000.
She has since called that year "life-changing".The company has made progress. After completing a programme of remote-controlled testing, it began carrying out piloted tests earlier this year. Initially, these were carried out with the aircraft tethered to the ground. In early November, it carried out its first untethered take-off and landing.
But there have also been serious setbacks. In August last year, a remotely-piloted prototype was badly damaged when it crashed during testing at Cotswold Airport, after a propeller blade fell off.In May one of its key partners, the engineering giant Rolls Royce
to supply electric motors for the aircraft.Ambitions remain sky high. Vertical Aerospace says it will deliver 150 aircraft to its customers by the end of the decade. By then, it also expects to be capable of producing 200 units a year, and to be breaking even in cash terms.