Manufacturing, Repair, Painting, and Drafting Occupations X Career Path: Workshop
293 matching jobs found.
Paint Mixer (Sign Writer)
A profession that mixes paints for various signboards, formulates them considering color and weather resistance, and then hand-draws letters and illustrations using brushes or airbrushes.
Drawn Thread Worker
Drawn thread workers use the drawn thread work technique, a type of openwork embroidery, to apply decorative patterns to clothing and textile products.
Donsu (Donsu) Weaver
Donsu weavers are artisans who produce donsu, a fabric with luster and intricate patterns, using silk or synthetic fibers and float weaving techniques.
Glue Applier (Joinery)
Artisan who uses traditional woodworking techniques with glue (nikawa) to bond and assemble components of joinery furniture and wooden products.
Nishikitsuke Worker (Ceramics Manufacturing)
Decorator using overglaze painting (nishikitsuke) technique to apply colored patterns or gold luster designs on ceramics.
Doll Dresser
Artisan who beautifully dresses Japanese dolls and hina dolls with kimono and obi sashes. Requires intricate sewing skills and traditional dressing techniques.
Doll Case Maker (Wooden)
Artisan who designs, manufactures, and finishes wooden doll cases. Handles a wide range of processes from material selection to processing, assembly, and decoration as a technical profession.
Doll Carver
Traditional artisan skill of shaping wooden dolls with chisels and carving knives, followed by coloring and finishing.
Seamstress (Japanese Clothing)
Artisan specializing in tailoring, alterations, and sewing of traditional Japanese clothing (such as kimono).
Fabric Zori Maker
Fabric zori makers are artisans who produce traditional Japanese sandals known as zori using fabric. They are specialists who manually perform tasks such as cutting fabric, shaping sole materials, attaching thongs, and more.