A cobbler is a person who makes shoes. In "Julius Caesar" the cobbler tell Flavius and Murellus he's leading the people through the street because he hopes their shoes will get worn out. This would be a way for him to get more business.
A Cobbler is someone who fixes shoes. He replaces old and damaged leather soles with new ones. In order to pierce the heavy leather he uses a kind of pick or extra heavy needle called an awl to punch holes in the leather and thread the stitching through it.
Yes, a competent cobbler can replace heels on dance shoes. You wouldn't want to increase the height by more than 1", though, as the last (the part of the shoe under your arch) is engineered to tilt at a certain angle depending on the height of the heel.
This quotation in from the "No Fear Shakespeare" version of Julius Caesar Act 1 Scene 1 and is an excellent example of why No Fear Shakespeare is a waste of time and why it should be abolished from classrooms. The notion is that if we replace Shakespeare's lines with something very simplistic then people will understand them more easily. It doesn't work, as this question shows. In fact, the sentence makes no sense and does not capture Shakespeare's meaning at all. The real line is "Nay, I beseech you sir, be not out with me; yet if you be out, sir, I can mend you." This cobbler likes to make puns and Marullus, the tribune who he is talking to is, like many straight men (I mean a comedian's sidekick here, not someone who is not gay; Shakespeare would love that ambiguity) is pretty thick. Marullus keeps on asking what the cobbler's job is and the cobbler keeps on making jokes. "Be not out with me" does mean being out of temper or angry, but this cobbler makes a pun on "being out". When he says "be not out with me" he means out of temper, but when he says "if you be out" he means out of condition or broken and he is talking about Marullus's shoes. His line "I can mend you" on the face means "I can mend your broken shoes", but he has just made a joke about being "a mender of bad soles" which is clearly a pun on "bad souls", so it also suggests that the cobbler can mend Marullus, who has a bad soul that needs mending. Marullus catches the insult and rages "Mend me, thou saucy fellow?" See? It makes sense if you read Shakespeare's words.
Slips.
cobblerA person who mends or makes shoes is a Cobbler
cobblerA person who mends or makes shoes is a Cobbler
A person who makes shoes.
A person that makes shoes is called a cobbler.
cobblerA person who mends or makes shoes is a Cobbler
i think a cobbler makes shoes
A shoemaker makes custom shoes and does repairs to good quality footwear.
A person who mends or makes shoes is a cobbler
Shoemaker (Or in olden days, a "cobbler")
tattii maker
If it makes shoes, it's a cobbler.
Usually, a shoe maker...(Not kidding)