It was then that shoemakers began creating individual shoes for the left and right feet. |
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At the bottom of the scale were trades serving local markets, such as carpenters, masons, bakers, or shoemakers. |
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Some dealt in food but there were also tailors, shoemakers, glove-makers, wheelwrights, carpenters, blacksmiths, tinsmiths, and many more. |
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Cordwainers, or shoemakers, were another important town trade for centuries. |
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Although the young town had its own blacksmiths, wheelwrights, shoemakers and ropemakers, it never developed its own business centre. |
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The hats were the size of a coin, with each little shoe fashioned by famous French shoemakers of the time. |
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Quality shoemakers know this and offer a wide range of comfortable footwear options. |
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The designs are beautiful drawings, but the costume builders and shoemakers must have had to make many adjustments for a dancer's body. |
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Thus all the carpenters are in one section, the goldsmiths in another, and the shoemakers in yet another. |
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The next largest industrial group were in the clothing trades, most conspicuously tailors and shoemakers. |
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Born to a family of shoemakers, he received little formal education and, on the death of his mother, was apprenticed to another cobbler when he was just ten years old. |
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He is drawn to the lanes of the city day after day, his camera capturing images of locksmiths, shoemakers, barbers, tailors and residents going about their daily affairs. |
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Like firms in textiles and clothing, shoemakers have also cut jobs, from 124,200 in 1995 to around 100,000 last year. |
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It was their elder brother Amadou, the first in the family line of shoemakers to become a musician, who started them out on their musical career. |
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Printers, shoemakers and tradesmen of all sorts embraced this sport, which fostered worker solidarity. |
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Independent artisans such as shoemakers had once performed all of the tasks in producing their products. |
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In 1841, according to the census list, there were 1 821 shoemakers within the county. |
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It has four floors and an unassuming white facade, behind which, according to the German newspapers, work the world's most secretive shoemakers. |
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Traditionally, you can only be a real musician if you belong to the 'griot' caste, but I come from a family of shoemakers. |
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It is known that Major Samuel Lawrence, for example, at times employed apprentice and journeymen shoemakers, so diversifying from purely agricultural production. |
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Spanish shoemakers are complaining that Chinese shoes take away almost all their business, by undercutting their prices, party through illegal means. |
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Most shoemakers work in big factories where conditions are usually unhealthy because of the noise and working with chemical substances such as glues, solvents and dressings. |
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This involves a programme of two or three years' vocational training to become, for example, butchers, bricklayers, shoemakers, domestic workers or gardeners. |
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Parish records give a snapshot of heads of family's occupations in 1835 and 1839 including several bakers, servants, shoemakers and wrights. |
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Tradesmen, such as shoemakers, believed that the Reform Act had given them the vote. |
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In their workshop, shoemakers Chaya Bamne, Tarabai, Susheela and Shivaji demonstrated and described the chappal-making process to the museum research team. |
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Indoor swap meet with 130 vendors, including jewelers and shoemakers, live entertainment and snackbar. |
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The shops of blacksmiths, coopers, shoemakers, storekeepers, woodworkers and tanners dotted the rural landscape, usually in or around riverside villages and hamlets. |
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If Huajian Shoes succeeds, other shoemakers may follow. |
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Old-fashioned shoemakers in shops are disappearing in Australia. |
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Whether women making footwear for their families or professional craftsmen, shoemakers are born and trained within the village to supply local populations. |
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Not all the rioters were necessarily farm workers, the list of those punished included rural artisans, shoemakers, carpenters, wheelwrights, blacksmiths and cobblers. |
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