Person who works on ropes, booms, lifts, hoists, etc. for stage, film, or television.
Profession; one who manages the rigging of watercraft.
A long slender pointed sable brush used by artists.
Someone who works on an oil rig.
1But no thimble-rigger had a keener eye for the cents than Fawcett.
2He was an old square rigger himself in the Civil War.
3The blacksmith, the rigger, the calker, took their pay in shares.
4No, too many calories for me, right now, got to watch me rigger.
5Each canoe had a long out-rigger, to prevent them from oversetting.
6Only experience will teach the rigger what tension to employ.
7He worked as chief rigger on the Eiger for the Imax film The Alps.
8I wrote about my WW2 work as a parachute rigger.
9Removed to Charleston, S.C., in 1851, worked as a rigger, leading a sea-faring life.
10Three poles rose from the garden's center, like the masts on a square rigger.
11To remedy this, the bowsprit has been devised, chiefly as an out-rigger for the fore-stay.
12Leary, 38, worked as a rigger and film stuntman.
13Mr. Hawkins: I ask the other be stricken out, that the rigger was sent up there.
14So he might be working ashore as a rigger, or on small boats of some kind.
15From the man's callused hands, and his way with cordage, Daniel took him for a rigger.
16They are of interest to designers, but this is written for the practical pilot and rigger.