Textile, Clothing, and Fiber Product Manufacturing Workers X Recommended Skills: Basic Quality Control Knowledge
24 matching jobs found.
Net Manufacturing Worker
A profession that manufactures knit fabrics and knitted materials by intertwining yarn, involving the operation of knitting machines, product finishing, and quality control.
Non-Apparel Sewing Machine Worker
A job that operates industrial sewing machines to assemble and sew non-apparel textile products such as bags and curtains.
Overlock Worker (Sewing Industry)
Sewing worker who operates an overlock machine to prevent fraying of clothing seams and perform edge finishing. Handles mass production on the production line.
Kakehagi (hagi) Worker
In the textile manufacturing process, artisans who manually repair and reweave cuts or frays in warp or weft threads using specialized kakehagi needles and thread to maintain product quality.
Work Glove Stitching Worker
A job that handles the overlock sewing process for work gloves, performing tasks to prevent fraying at the edges of the product.
Small Garment Stitcher
Artisan who manufactures and finishes small garments and fabric products by hand sewing or hand embroidery.
Finishing Worker (Apparel Sewing)
Specialist responsible for the final process in apparel manufacturing, completing products through ironing, press processing, inspection, etc.
Seatbelt Assembly Worker
A manufacturing occupation that assembles automotive seatbelt parts using prescribed procedures and tools.
Weaving Machine Operator
A profession that operates looms to combine warp and weft yarns to produce fabric. Involves machine preparation, operation, adjustment, quality control, safety and health management, etc.
Weaving Preparation Worker
This occupation involves pre-processing tasks such as warping the warp yarns, sizing, reed threading, and heald threading before weaving fabric on a loom.