When your day-to-day work consists of plenty of document editing, you know that every file format requires its own approach and sometimes particular software. Handling a seemingly simple STW file can often grind the entire process to a stop, especially if you are trying to edit with inadequate tools. To avoid this sort of troubles, find an editor that will cover your needs regardless of the file extension and inlay design in STW with zero roadblocks.
With DocHub, you are going to work with an editing multitool for virtually any occasion or file type. Reduce the time you used to devote to navigating your old software’s features and learn from our intuitive interface while you do the job. DocHub is a sleek online editing platform that covers all of your file processing needs for any file, such as STW. Open it and go straight to efficiency; no previous training or reading instructions is needed to reap the benefits DocHub brings to document management processing. Start with taking a couple of minutes to register your account now.
See improvements within your document processing just after you open your DocHub account. Save your time on editing with our one platform that will help you be more efficient with any document format with which you have to work.
- [Voiceover] Marquetry, or wood mosaics, are made by arranging hundreds of small separately cut pieces of wood into an intricate design. The process for making marquetry began when I craftsman drew, or more often traced, a design on paper. This drawing was then secured to a sheet of heavy brown paper. Following the lines of the drawing, the craftsman perforated the pattern. Although now made with a device similar to a sewing machine, during the 18th century, thousands of holes had to be laboriously punched by hand with a needle. This heavy sheet, called the pounce pattern, was laid on top of a sheet of white paper. The craftsman then rubbed graphite over the surface of the perforated pattern to transfer the design to the bottom sheet. The design could be reproduced several times using this method. The wood was then sliced into thin sheets called veneers. In the 1700s, skilled artisans using a cumbersome hand-held saw, could cut veneer as thin as one millimeter. Elaborate marquetry de