By wagnertamanaha on Skatehive
https://img.leopedia.io/DQmNceQTTGW7Wt3zrFjc4fpsV7SKmncjFjsL63oNMihjQTd/mesa%20paste%20up.png Now that I'm drawing regularly again, I'm reminded of the old equipment—rulers, compasses, set squares, and tables. Yes, the tables were different because they needed to be large enough to hold paper, pencils, pens, brushes, and ink bottles. In the first agency I worked for after graduating in advertising, the same one I mentioned in the post The master's crooked finger (and cat's eye), there was something similar to what I tried to reproduce in today's art for the Challenge: Drawing (almost) every day on iPad. A table for paste-up or final art, with a parallel ruler, usually covered with a soft, waterproof plastic, in green or white. Paste-up referred to the professional who assembled the final art, pasting "photocomposition" (text and titles of advertisements and brochures) and drawing borders (frames, lines) with Indian ink pens. A term that was common, but with the arrival of computers, it