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Framing Carpenter

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Revision as of 04:51, 1 January 2026 by Jlebeau81 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "A framing carpenter (also known as a rough carpenter or framer) is a construction trade professional who builds the structural skeleton of buildings using wood (or sometimes metal) framing. They create the framework that supports walls, floors, and roofs, providing the "bones" of a structure before insulation, drywall, electrical, plumbing, and finishes are added. This role comes before drywall hanging in the construction sequence—the framer erects the studs, joists, a...")
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A framing carpenter (also known as a rough carpenter or framer) is a construction trade professional who builds the structural skeleton of buildings using wood (or sometimes metal) framing. They create the framework that supports walls, floors, and roofs, providing the "bones" of a structure before insulation, drywall, electrical, plumbing, and finishes are added. This role comes before drywall hanging in the construction sequence—the framer erects the studs, joists, and rafters that drywall hangers later cover with panels. Key Responsibilities

Reading blueprints and layouts to determine dimensions and materials. Cutting and assembling lumber (typically 2x4s, 2x6s, etc.) for walls, floors, and roofs. Erecting wall frames on the foundation, standing them up, and bracing them. Installing floor joists, subfloors, roof trusses or rafters, and sheathing (plywood/OSB on exterior). Ensuring everything is plumb, level, square, and meets building codes for structural integrity. Using tools like framing nailers (pneumatic guns), circular saws, hammers, squares, levels, and sometimes cranes for trusses.

Framers work in teams, often outdoors in all weather, and the job is fast-paced on production sites.