Corrie Sosnowsky
St. Petersburg, FL 33713
ac3p1e@r.postjobfree.com
WORK EXPERIENCE
Jackson Transformers
April 2017 - October 2017
Tampa, FL 33634
• Production line assembly and brazing. Working from blue prints.
Arrow Sheet Metal, Tampa, FL
Welder, September 2016 - April 2017
Bob Philippus
•Clamp, hold, tack-weld, heat-bend, grind or bolt component parts to obtain required configurations and positions for welding.
•Lay out, position, align, and secure parts and assemblies prior to assembly, using straightedges, combination squares, calipers, and rulers.
•Chip or grind off excess weld, slag, or spatter, using hand scrapers or power chippers, portable grinders, or arc-cutting equipment.
•Remove rough spots from workpieces, using portable grinders, hand files, or scrapers.
MIG welding, TIG welding
Aluminum, Steel, Stainless Steel
Freelance Welder
April 2016 - Present
Links Staffing, Contracted Jobs, Tampa, FL
Aztec Welding, St. Petersburg, FL
Robert Hitch
MIG welding, TIG welding
Aluminum, Steel, Stainless Steel
M. E. D. Mechanical, Salisbury, MD
Welder, April 2016 - August 2016
Michael Dickerson
•Clamp, hold, tack-weld, heat-bend, grind or bolt component parts to obtain required configurations and positions for welding.
•Lay out, position, align, and secure parts and assemblies prior to assembly, using straightedges, combination squares, calipers, and rulers.
•Chip or grind off excess weld, slag, or spatter, using hand scrapers or power chippers, portable grinders, or arc-cutting equipment.
•Remove rough spots from workpieces, using portable grinders, hand files, or scrapers.
•Check grooves, angles, or gap allowances, using precision measuring instruments.
•Pull, push, or pry structural steel members into approximate positions for bolting into place.
•Force structural steel members into final positions, using crowbars, jacks, or hand tools.
Stick welding, MIG welding, TIG welding
Aluminum, Steel, Stainless Steel
Incident Communication Solutions, Stevensville, MD
Precision Welder / Fabricator, September 10th, 2015 - April 2016
John Morgan
•Analyze engineering drawings, blueprints, specifications, sketches, work orders, and material safety data sheets to plan layout, assembly, and welding operations.
•Clamp, hold, tack-weld, heat-bend, grind or bolt component parts for welding.
•Lay out, position, align, and secure parts and assemblies prior to assembly, using straightedges, combination squares, calipers, and rulers.
•Chip or grind off excess weld, slag, or spatter, using hand scrapers or power chippers, portable grinders, or arc-cutting equipment.
•Monitor the fitting and welding processes to avoid overheating of parts or warping, distortion, or expansion of material.
•Examine workpieces for defects and measure workpieces with straightedges or templates to ensure conformance with specifications.
•Remove rough spots from workpieces, using portable grinders, hand files, or scrapers.
•Check grooves, angles, or gap allowances, using precision measuring instruments.
•Pull, push, or pry structural steel members into approximate positions for bolting into place.
•Force structural steel members into final positions, using crowbars, jacks, or hand tools.
TIG welding
Aluminum, Steel, Stainless Steel
Welder in a Flash, Baltimore, MD
Welder, January 2013 - August 2016
Contractor - Chris Dwojeski
•Clamp, hold, tack-weld, heat-bend, grind or bolt component parts to obtain required configurations and positions for welding.
•Lay out, position, align, and secure parts and assemblies prior to assembly, using straightedges, combination squares, calipers, and rulers.
•Chip or grind off excess weld, slag, or spatter, using hand scrapers or power chippers, portable grinders, or arc-cutting equipment.
•Monitor the fitting and welding processes to avoid overheating of parts or warping, distortion, or expansion of material.
•Examine workpieces for defects and measure workpieces with straightedges or templates to ensure conformance with specifications.
•Remove rough spots from workpieces, using portable grinders, hand files, or scrapers.
•Check grooves, angles, or gap allowances, using precision measuring instruments.
•Pull, push, or pry structural steel members into approximate positions for bolting into place.
•Force structural steel members into final positions, using crowbars, jacks, or hand tools.
MIG welding, TIG welding
Aluminum, Steel, Stainless Steel
Plating & Sales Baltimore, MD
Welder, January 2013 - September 2015
Art Naag - Owner
Clamp, hold, tack-weld, heat-bend, grind or bolt component parts.
•Welding anodizing tanks, stands and frames to help reinforce and strengthen the structure.
•Plastic welding, Steel TIG, Steel MIG, Aluminum TIG.
•Wiring components of anodizing heaters.
•Operate Forklift.
•Lay out, position, align, and secure parts and assemblies prior to assembly, using straightedges, combination squares, calipers, and rulers.
•Monitor the fitting, burning, plasma cutting and welding processes to avoid overheating of parts or warping, shrinking, distortion, or expansion of material.
•Examine workpieces for defects and measure workpieces with straightedges or templates to ensure conformance with specifications.
•Analyze engineering drawings, blueprints, specifications, sketches, work orders, and material safety data sheets to plan layout, assembly, and welding operations.
•Check grooves, angles, or gap allowances, using micrometers, calipers, and precision measuring instruments.
•Pull, push, or pry structural steel members into approximate positions for bolting into place.
•Force structural steel members into final positions, using turnbuckles, crowbars, jacks, or hand tools.
MIG welding, TIG welding
Aluminum, Steel, Stainless Steel
ACCESS DESIGN Kitty Hawk, NC
Illustrator and Designer, August 2007 - November 2009
Adam Baldwin - Owner
•Confer with sales and management executives or with clients in order to discuss design ideas.
•Identify target markets for designs, looking at factors such as age, gender, and socioeconomic status.
•Select materials and production techniques to be used for products.
•Collaborate with other designers to coordinate special products and designs.
•Design custom clothing and accessories for individuals, retailers, or theatrical, television, or film productions.
•Develop a group of products and/or accessories, and market them through venues such as boutiques or mail-order catalogs.
•Read scripts and consult directors and other production staff in order to develop design concepts and plan productions.
• Draw patterns for articles designed; then cut patterns, and cut material according
• to patterns, using measuring instruments and scissors.
•Determine prices for styles.
SOZRA STUDIOS Union Bridge, MD
Freelance Jewelry designer, Fabricator, January 1997 - Present Freelance
John Sosnowsky - Owner
Retail sales in national juried art shows.
•Smooth soldered joints and rough spots, using hand files and emery paper, and polish smoothed areas with polishing wheels or buffing wire.
•Create & design jewelry from materials such as Niobium, Gold, Silver and precious and semiprecious stones.
•Clean and polish metal jewelry pieces, using jewelers' tools, polishing wheels, and chemical baths.
•Select and acquire metals and gems for designs.Compute costs of labor and materials in order to determine production costs of products and articles.
•Cold forge using various hammers and tools.
•Mark and drill holes in jewelry mountings in order to center stones according to design specifications.
EDUCATION
Walkersville High School Walkersville, MD
High School Diploma, June 2002
Pennsylvania College Of Art And Design Lancaster, PA
Bachelor‘s Degree BFA, May 2007
North American Trade School Baltimore, MD
Combination Welding Diploma, May 2015
Earlbeck Gases & Technologies Certification, July 2015
Angelo Delacruz - Professor 202-***-****
ADDITIONAL SKILLS
•MIG welding, TIG welding, Stick welding, Aluminum, Steel, Stainless Steel welding, Plasma carbon arc cut, Blue Print reading, Concept Design.
References upon request