Manufacturing, Repair, Painting, and Drafting Occupations X Career Path: Manufacturing manager

212 matching jobs found.

Napkin Weaver

This occupation involves operating looms to produce fabrics for manufacturing cloth napkins such as table napkins.

Nama-fu manufacturer

Food manufacturing occupation that produces nama-fu and nama-fu products. Using wheat gluten as raw material, performs a series of processes from kneading, forming, steaming, cooling, and packaging.

Rope manufacturing worker (fiber-made)

This occupation manufactures ropes such as cotton cords and hemp ropes using fiber raw materials. It produces products suited to required strength and applications through processes like twisting, braiding, and plying.

Animal glue (nikawa) maker

This occupation manufactures animal glue using collagen extracted from animal bones and skins as raw materials, through processes such as heat extraction, filtration, and drying. High quality maintenance is required for traditional crafts and restoration purposes.

Dried sardine processor

A job that manufactures dried sardines through processes such as boiling, drying, and salting using sardines as raw material.

Dried shrimp manufacturing worker

This occupation manufactures dried shrimp through processes such as sorting, washing, heating, drying, and packaging using shrimp as raw material.

Milk beverage manufacturing worker

A job that manufactures milk beverages through processes such as pasteurization, homogenization, blending, and filling using milk and dairy products as raw materials.

Dairy Production Equipment Operator

Operates and monitors equipment that manufactures dairy products from raw milk, managing processes such as pasteurization, homogenization, filling, and packaging.

Disulfide Charge Worker (Chemical Fiber Manufacturing)

The Disulfide Charge Worker is a technical position that performs charging processes using disulfides in the chemical fiber manufacturing process to maintain product quality.

Sewing Thread Manufacturing Worker

Sewing thread manufacturing workers produce threads for sewing by operating and managing processes such as twisting fiber raw materials, sizing, and winding.