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beader

n. One who makes decorative beading.

Wikipedia
Beader

A beader is a person who installs plastic moulding strips into slotted edges of metal tabletops using a mallet and bandsaw.

The beader positions the centre of the moulding strip over the leading edge of the tabletop as it moves along a conveyor and pushes the tongue of the molding into a slot along the entire edge of the tabletop, pounding the moulding with a mallet to seat it firmly in the slot.

The tabletop is then lifted from a conveyor onto a worktable where the beader cuts off overlapping ends of molding using a bandsaw and pounds the trimmed ends of the moulding into the slot to form a tight joint.

A beader also heats the moulding strips in a hot water tank prior to installation if specified by the job order.

A beader uses beads to create many kinds of decorative items.

Usage examples of "beader".

Hideo-san and Dugal Beader did their best for us, and managed to hold out for longer than anyone thought they could.

He and Hideo-san and Dugal Beader did their best for us, and managed to hold out for longer than anyone thought they could.

Paulie wanted to cover the glass beader with a blanket like a shroud, maybe get flowers to show respect.

Un-adorned metal boxes, beaders use minute particles of glass oxide impact beads and around eighty pounds of air pressure to blast rust and peeling paint off car parts.

It took a wealthy and established modiste indeed to live comfortably and pay seam•stresses and beaders during the off season when fashionable society de•serted the West End for Brighton or the country—by August, Minette would probably have agreed to do fittings at midnight just to stay work•ing.

It took a wealthy and established modiste indeed to live comfortably and pay seam­stresses and beaders during the off season when fashionable society de­serted the West End for Brighton or the country—by August, Minette would probably have agreed to do fittings at midnight just to stay work­ing.

It took a wealthy and established modiste indeed to live comfortably and pay seamstresses and beaders during the off season when fashionable society deserted the West End for Brighton or the countryby August, Minette would probably have agreed to do fittings at midnight just to stay working.