Unusual file formats within your daily document management and editing processes can create instant confusion over how to edit them. You might need more than pre-installed computer software for effective and quick document editing. If you want to inlay pattern in NEIS or make any other simple alternation in your document, choose a document editor that has the features for you to work with ease. To deal with all of the formats, including NEIS, choosing an editor that actually works properly with all types of documents will be your best choice.
Try DocHub for efficient document management, irrespective of your document’s format. It has potent online editing instruments that streamline your document management operations. It is easy to create, edit, annotate, and share any document, as all you need to gain access these features is an internet connection and an functioning DocHub profile. A single document tool is all you need. Don’t lose time switching between various programs for different documents.
Enjoy the efficiency of working with an instrument designed specifically to streamline document processing. See how straightforward it really is to modify any document, even when it is the first time you have worked with its format. Sign up a free account now and enhance your whole working process.
- [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