Yes. They also make weapons and bits.
The horseshoe is being heated by conduction and radiation of heat from the fire.
In medieval times the blacksmith worked at the place where the product was needed. They would not generally make something in one town for sale in another town. They would make it in the town where they would sell it. If you brought your horse to the blacksmith's shop for a horseshoe, he would make it and put it on your horse.
Some terms for Blacksmith are , Smithy, horseshoer's are called Farrier's, Iron smith might be a name, possibly Hammersmith. But to answer the question more accurately, there may be an anvil , the main tool a Blacksmith uses, or a hammer, tongs , horseshoe, or a combination of these or any other tool common to a Blacksmith.
When a blacksmith is hammering a horseshoe into shape, he has a strip of metal which has been heated up in his forge to such a point that the metal is ALMOST melting. When it is in this state, the metal is flexible and allows the blacksmith to hammer it into the shape of a horseshoe without snapping the metal bar. When he has the right shape, he plunges it into a bucket of water so that it rapidly cools and so becomes solid again and is no longer flexible. **Physical Science (pg. 206 #20) answer:** Metals are malleable and great conductors of electricity. However, they don't break. This would explain why the horseshoe doesn't break when a blacksmith pounds it into shape.
They make horseshoe magnet babies.
Because metals do not break They bend easily and conduct heat 5th grade science...
The Blacksmith would make houses and gardens using iron gates and other things.
Yes
yes
A blacksmith heats and hammers iron into the shape and size required.
Steel wiredrawing plants manufacture horseshoe nails
they make 1,000 dollars