cordwainer

noun·/ˈkɔːrdˌweɪ.nɚ/

A maker of shoes from new leather; traditionally distinguished from the cobbler, who repairs what is already worn (historical). Cordwainer carries the dignity of craft: not mending the foot’s history, but building its future.

The cordwainer’s bench smelled of hide and beeswax, and each pair began as a promise made to a last.

Etymology

From Middle English, via Anglo-French, ultimately tied to Cordovan leather—fine goatskin associated with Córdoba in Spain. The word keeps an old trade-route embedded in it: city to leather to shoe to name.

Related Words

cobblerrepairer of shoes; often confused with cordwainer
Cordovanthe leather historically associated with the craft
leatherworkerthe wider guild-family
lastthe foot-shaped form on which shoes are made