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Federal Wage Grade position designing and painting signs, lettering, and visual displays for federal facilities, military bases, national parks, and government buildings.
Federal Wage System Pay
Federal Wage Grade (WG) pay varies by geographic location and is determined by local prevailing wage surveys.
Look Up WG Pay by LocationSource: DoD Civilian Personnel Advisory Service
Official OPM qualification standards for WG-4104
Qualification requirements not yet available for this series.
Step-by-step guide to landing a federal sign painting position
WG positions require demonstrated skill in a specific trade or craft. Review the job announcement for required certifications, licenses, and hands-on experience.
WG positions are experience-based, not grade-based. Document your years of hands-on trade experience, apprenticeships completed, and journeyman status if applicable.
Collect your DD-214, trade certifications (welding, electrical, HVAC, etc.), apprenticeship completion certificates, and any specialized licenses required for your trade.
Create a detailed federal resume highlighting your hands-on trade experience, tools and equipment operated, safety training, and specific projects completed. Include hours worked per week.
Search for WG positions in your trade specialty, carefully answer assessment questions about your skill level and experience, and submit before the closing date.
Understanding of trade-specific tools, equipment, materials, and techniques required for the position
Physical coordination and skill in using hands and tools to perform precise work
Knowledge of workplace safety procedures, OSHA standards, and proper use of personal protective equipment
Ability to diagnose issues, troubleshoot problems, and determine effective repair solutions
Attention to detail ensuring work meets specifications, standards, and quality requirements
Ability to read and interpret technical drawings, schematics, diagrams, and work orders
Proficiency in operating trade-specific machinery, power tools, and specialized equipment
Knowledge of preventive maintenance, inspection protocols, and equipment care
Ability to communicate effectively with supervisors, coworkers, and customers about work status
Flexibility to work in various conditions and adjust to changing priorities and assignments
π‘ Use these phrases to help ATS systems and human recruiters find your qualifications.
Grade information not available
A Sign Painter (WG-4104) designs and paints signs, lettering, and visual displays for federal facilities, military bases, national parks, and government buildings. They create directional signs, safety markings, unit insignia, and informational displays.
WG-4104 positions are paid under the Federal Wage System based on local prevailing rates. Journeyman wages (WG-9/10) typically range $24-$36 per hour depending on locality. Annual earnings range $50,000-$75,000. Artistic ability commands premium rates.
WG-4104 requires artistic ability combined with trade skills. Qualifications include hand lettering, layout design, paint application, and ability to create signs meeting federal specifications. Computer graphics skills increasingly supplement traditional techniques.
Military visual information or graphic arts experience may help qualify. MOSs involving sign making, unit display creation, or visual communications provide relevant experience. However, demonstrated artistic skill and lettering ability are most important.
Sign Painters progress through skill levels based on artistic capability. Modern positions increasingly involve computer-generated graphics alongside traditional skills. Career paths include graphic design, visual information specialist (GS-1084), or facilities signage management.
Search USAJOBS for 'Sign Painter' or series '4104.' Positions exist at large installations and national parks. Include portfolio examples demonstrating your lettering, design, and sign work. Veterans receive preference.
Create a tailored federal resume that meets OPM standards.