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Glazier

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AVG. SALARY

$47,640

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EDUCATION

High school (GED) +

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JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

Interviews

Insider Info

Gillian Swindells was in her second year apprenticing as a glazier when she got a good idea of what the real world would be like. Apprentices learn their skills on the job and learn early what the job entails. Sometimes it entails the unexpected.

Swindells, the daughter of a glazier, went to work at a commercial building site. She started to handle a large sheet of glass, when she heard a voice booming out: "Don't touch that! That's for the glazier!"

"When I told him I was the glazier, he didn't believe me at first. I had to tell him who I work for. He was pretty embarrassed," she recalls.

Perhaps it's not too surprising. There are a handful of non-unionized women glaziers, and unionized numbers are even smaller. It's common for glaziers not to know of even a single female colleague.

While Swindells isn't sure she enjoys being a female in a nearly all-male trade, she knows it's the right job for her. "I never wanted to be a secretary or stare at a computer all day. I'd go nuts," she says.

Swindells says the work is tough. "You have to be very strong for this job. I worked out on weights before I got into this. Now I don't have to. At the end of the day, I just want to come home and play with my son."

Her biggest challenge right now is doing metal mechanics -- another part of a glazier's job that involves building a frame for the glass to be placed into.

"I can picture it in my head, and after it's all installed I can look at it and say, 'Wow!' I did one recently [for a local business] and when my son and I walked in the doors, he looked up at me and said, 'You put those doors in, didn't you Mom?'"

While some say the construction business isn't the most stable field to get into, Swindells is confident she's made the right choice.

"There are more people putting up buildings today than ever before and there's always windows and doors to put in. All the buildings now are glass. It may be steel and concrete to create the main structure, but everything else is glass."

Glazier work also runs through the veins of Trevor King, who came to the field after working in his father's shop as a youngster. "I got my driver's license and my dad bought me a car. So to pay for the car, I worked at my father's glass company. It was a full fabrication shop, so I did commercial work and residential work and buildings under six floors."

Commercial glass offers greater scope. Also, the larger the piece of glass, the more flex in it. A windy day could turn into a nightmare for a glazier who doesn't know how to handle it properly.

"You've got to be very careful with it," King says. "Most people don't understand that glass is really a slow moving liquid. That's why in old houses you'll see window panes where the glass is distorted. That's because the glass has reacted to the force of gravity over the years. It's like a caramel coating slipping."

One of the more interesting projects King has worked on was the construction of a butterfly house. "It was an inverted glass cone with the top cut off at an angle," he says. The project proves that glass can be used for anything -- and will be around for a while.