0 someone whose job is selling cloth, pins, thread, etc. used for sewing, or a shop where these things are sold
According to court documents he has listed his occupation as haberdasher.
Related occupations include haberdasher, draper and cloth merchant, while clothier historically referred to someone who manufactured cloth, often under the domestic system.
There he began working as a haberdasher.
The central house was a bookshop from 1804 to 1850, and other tenants of the three houses included a picture dealer, an auctioneer and a haberdasher.
The haberdashers, for example, did not apply any restrictions till 1597, when they began to reverse their stance.
He is married to an over-the-hill and very outspoken haberdasher, and manages a shop selling photograph frames.
There were many haberdashers and specialist shops, and it was not too unusual to see chauffeurs waiting for their employers to emerge from the shops.
In the late 18th century, the buildings enclosing the monastery were rented out to the haberdashers.