Framer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A US Army framer in the United States nailing the roof decking to prefabricated trusses using a nail gun. His tool belt and safety glasses are typical, but hearing protection and fall arrest equipment are missing.
Modern framers in the United States specialize in erecting wood structures using the platform framing method

A framer is someone who builds or creates frames.[1] In construction work, frames may be built from wood or metal and provide support and shape to a structure. In a related sense, framers may create frames for art works, pictures, or mirrors. The term framer is also used for the authors of a formal text such as a constitution.[2]

Building industry

In building construction a framer is a carpenter who assembles the major structural elements of a wood-framed building called the framing. Framers build walls out of studs, sills, and headers; build floors from joists, beams, and trusses; and frame roofs using ridge poles and rafters or trusses. Platform framing is the most common method of construction.

Timber framing

Timber framers are framers who work in the traditional style of timber framing, historically with wooden joinery. Timber framing is a type of light framing in which wood (as the building structure) and drywall framing are used.

Traditional chair making industry

Modern craftsman assembling a Windsor style sofa

In the traditional chair making industry, it was the bodger who produced the turned parts of a chair and the benchman who produced the splats, side rails and other sawn parts. However it was the framer who assembled and finished the chair with the parts supplied by the bodger and benchman.[3]

Art

Written text

References

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