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Glass Blowers, Molders, Benders, and Finishers in Nevada

Glass Blowers, Molders, Benders, and Finishers in Nevada

Considering working as a Glass Blowers, Molders, Benders, and Finishers in Nevada? Below are the key facts. Mold, shape, form, cast, or carve products such as food products, figurines, tile, pipes, and candles consisting of clay, glass, plaster, concrete, stone, or combinations of materials.

What do Glass Blowers, Molders, Benders, and Finishers Make in Nevada?

For glass blowers, molders, benders, and finishers working in Nevada, wages run about $46,350 per year (or roughly $22.28/hour).Earnings range from $39,450 at the 10th percentile to $61,140 at the 90th percentile.

Wage Statistic Annual Hourly
10th percentile $39,450 $18.97
25th percentile $40,360 $19.40
Median (50th) $46,350 $22.28
75th percentile $50,680 $24.37
90th percentile $61,140 $29.39
Salary ranges for Glass Blowers, Molders, Benders, and Finishers in Nevada

The location quotient — a measure of how concentrated this occupation is in Nevada compared to the national average — is 1.04.

National Wage Comparison

Nationally, glass blowers, molders, benders, and finishers earn a median of $36,735 per year ($17.66/hour), exceeding the Nevada median.

Employment Outlook

National employment for 437,500 glass blowers, molders, benders, and finishers in the U.S.. In Nevada alone, around 360 people work in this role. That’s below the typical state, which employs around 620 glass blowers, molders, benders, and finishers.

Forecasted number of jobs for Glass Blowers, Molders, Benders, and Finishers

Top Nevada Metros for Glass Blowers, Molders, Benders, and Finishers

The metro areas below employ the most glass blowers, molders, benders, and finishers in Nevada.

Metro Area Number Employed Annual Median Salary
Las Vegas-Henderson-North Las Vegas, NV 230 $45,860
Reno, NV 110 $46,350

Top States for Glass Blowers, Molders, Benders, and Finishers Employment

These states have the highest employment of glass blowers, molders, benders, and finishers work.

State Number Employed
California 4,090
Michigan 1,980
Texas 1,950
Indiana 1,740
Pennsylvania 1,740
Ohio 1,730
Florida 1,680
New York 1,350
Illinois 1,160
Massachusetts 1,150
Alabama 1,140
Washington 1,100
Tennessee 930
Missouri 810
New Jersey 800
Kansas 800
Wisconsin 790
Minnesota 730
North Carolina 710
Georgia 680

Highest-Paying States for Glass Blowers, Molders, Benders, and Finishers

Where glass blowers, molders, benders, and finishers earn the most: glass blowers, molders, benders, and finishers.

State Annual Median Salary
Hawaii $74,780
Maryland $51,470
New Hampshire $50,690
New York $50,470
Connecticut $50,350
Massachusetts $49,530
Montana $49,350
Oregon $49,290
New Jersey $49,120
California $48,390

Skills

Key glass blowers, molders, benders, and finishers skills, rated on an importance scale of 0 to 5:

Operations Monitoring  3.4 / 5
0
5
Quality Control Analysis  3.4 / 5
0
5
Operation and Control  3.4 / 5
0
5
Monitoring  3.2 / 5
0
5
Critical Thinking  3.0 / 5
0
5
Active Listening  3.0 / 5
0
5

Knowledge Areas

Key knowledge areas for this occupation, rated on an importance scale of 0 to 5:

Production and Processing  3.8 / 5
0
5
Design  3.7 / 5
0
5
Mechanical  3.2 / 5
0
5
Engineering and Technology  3.1 / 5
0
5
Customer and Personal Service  3.1 / 5
0
5
Mathematics  3.1 / 5
0
5

Abilities

The abilities that matter most for glass blowers, molders, benders, and finishers, rated on an importance scale of 0 to 5:

Arm-Hand Steadiness  3.9 / 5
0
5
Near Vision  3.9 / 5
0
5
Control Precision  3.8 / 5
0
5
Reaction Time  3.8 / 5
0
5
Visualization  3.6 / 5
0
5
Visual Color Discrimination  3.6 / 5
0
5

Daily Tasks

Common tasks include:

  • Heat glass to pliable stage, using gas flames or ovens and rotating glass to heat it uniformly.
  • Inspect, weigh, and measure products to verify conformance to specifications, using instruments such as micrometers, calipers, magnifiers, or rulers.
  • Record manufacturing information, such as quantities, sizes, or types of goods produced.
  • Place glass into dies or molds of presses and control presses to form products, such as glassware components or optical blanks.
  • Spray or swab molds with oil solutions to prevent adhesion of glass.
  • Blow tubing into specified shapes to prevent glass from collapsing, using compressed air or own breath, or blow and rotate gathers in molds or on boards to obtain final shapes.
  • Determine types and quantities of glass required to fabricate products.
  • Set up and adjust machine press stroke lengths and pressures and regulate oven temperatures, according to glass types to be processed.
  • Shape, bend, or join sections of glass, using paddles, pressing and flattening hand tools, or cork.
  • Design and create glass objects, using blowpipes and artisans' hand tools and equipment.
  • Operate and maintain finishing machines to grind, drill, sand, bevel, decorate, wash, or polish glass or glass products.
  • Repair broken scrolls by replacing them with new sections of tubing.

Work Activities

  • Getting Information
  • Controlling Machines and Processes
  • Communicating with Supervisors, Peers, or Subordinates
  • Monitoring Processes, Materials, or Surroundings
  • Inspecting Equipment, Structures, or Materials
  • Handling and Moving Objects
  • Performing General Physical Activities
  • Identifying Objects, Actions, and Events
  • Making Decisions and Solving Problems
  • Working with Computers
  • Evaluating Information to Determine Compliance with Standards
  • Thinking Creatively

Tools & Technology

Technologies frequently used: Hot technologies: Microsoft Excel

Other careers like glass blowers, molders, benders, and finishers include:

Also Known As

Artificial Glass Eye Maker, Bender, Blow Molder, Blower, Bottle Blower, Fiber Glass Worker, Gaffer, Glass Bender, Glass Block Bender, Glass Block Installer, Glass Blower, Glass Blower Technician, Glass Blowing Instructor, Glass Blowing Lathe Operator, Glass Finisher.

References

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