What Furniture Finishers Do Shape, finish, and refinish damaged, worn, or used furniture or new high-grade furniture to specified color or finish.
Other Job Titles Furniture Finishers May Have Finisher, Furniture Finisher, Lacquer Sprayer, Sprayer
Tasks & Responsibilities May Include Brush, spray, or hand-rub finishing ingredients, such as paint, oil, stain, or wax, onto and into wood grain and apply lacquer or other sealers. Fill and smooth cracks or depressions, remove marks and imperfections, and repair broken parts, using plastic or wood putty, glue, nails, or screws. Smooth, shape, and touch up surfaces to prepare them for finishing, using sandpaper, pumice stones, steel wool, chisels, sanders, or grinders. Remove accessories prior to finishing, and mask areas that should not be exposed to finishing processes or substances. Remove old finishes and damaged or deteriorated parts, using hand tools, stripping tools, sandpaper, steel wool, abrasives, solvents, or dip baths.
See More Level of Education Attained by Furniture Finishers Most common level of education among people in this career: High school diploma or equivalent (61%)
Less than high school diploma
High school diploma or equivalent
Post-secondary certificate
This page includes information from theO*NET 26.1 Database by the U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration (USDOL/ETA). Used under theCC BY 4.0 license. O*NET® is a trademark of USDOL/ETA.