DST to DJVU Converter

Convert DST embroidery patterns to DjVu document format

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Compact Documents

DjVu wraps your DST embroidery render in a highly compressed document — smaller files than many alternative formats.

Cross-Platform Viewing

DjVu viewers exist for every platform. Share your embroidery document with anyone regardless of their device.

Data Privacy

DST files are deleted immediately after conversion. DJVU downloads are cleared from Convertio within 24 hours.

How to convert DST to DJVU

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose djvu or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your djvu file right afterwards

About formats

DST (Tajima) is a machine embroidery file format created by Tajima Industries, one of the world's leading manufacturers of commercial embroidery equipment. The format encodes stitch data as a sequence of relative coordinate movements, with each stitch record containing a horizontal offset, vertical offset, and a command flag indicating the stitch type — normal stitch, jump (move without stitching), color change, or stop. DST files use a compact binary encoding where each stitch occupies three bytes, making the format efficient for storing complex multi-color designs with tens of thousands of stitches. The coordinate system uses 0.1 mm increments with a maximum single-stitch length of 12.1 mm in any direction. DST has become the de facto standard in the commercial embroidery industry — virtually every embroidery machine from any manufacturer can read DST files, making it the most widely supported embroidery format in existence. One advantage is universal machine compatibility: a DST file will run reliably on Tajima, Barudan, SWF, Brother, and Melco machines alike, eliminating format conversion concerns. The minimal file structure is another strength — files are compact, load instantly even on older machine controllers with limited memory, and their simplicity makes them resistant to corruption during transfer. While DST lacks embedded metadata like thread color names and design previews, this limitation is offset by the format's unmatched portability across the global embroidery industry.
Developer: Tajima Industries
Initial release: 1987
DjVu (pronounced "deja vu") is a document format developed at AT&T Labs by Yann LeCun, Leon Bottou, Patrick Haffner, and Paul Howard, first released in 1996. The format was specifically designed for storing scanned documents and images at very high compression ratios while maintaining visual quality suitable for on-screen reading. DjVu achieves this through a layered approach: the document image is separated into a foreground layer (text and line art at full resolution), a background layer (photographs and textures at reduced resolution), and a mask layer that determines which layer is visible at each pixel. This separation, combined with purpose-built compression algorithms for each layer type, typically produces files 5-10 times smaller than equivalent JPEG or PDF scans. One advantage is exceptional compression on scanned pages — a 300 DPI color scan that might occupy 25 MB as TIFF or 500 KB as JPEG typically compresses to 40-80 KB in DjVu while preserving legible text. The progressive rendering model is another strength: DjVu files stream efficiently over networks, displaying a readable low-resolution version almost immediately while progressively refining to full quality. The format supports multi-page documents, embedded text layers for searchability, hyperlinks, annotations, and a shared dictionary mechanism that further compresses collections of similar pages. DjVu is widely used by libraries and archives for digitized historical documents and manuscripts.
Developer: AT&T Labs
Initial release: 1996

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DST to DJVU?

DjVu offers excellent compression for document images. Converting DST creates a compact document preview of the embroidery design.

What opens DJVU files?

DjVu viewers like WinDjView, Sumatra PDF, Evince, and browser plugins display DjVu documents. Okular handles it on Linux.

Is DJVU smaller than PDF?

DjVu typically achieves better compression for scanned-type content. For embroidery renders, both produce comparable file sizes.

Does the embroidery render look sharp?

DjVu preserves fine detail well thanks to its layer-based compression. The stitch pattern renders clearly in the output.

Is DST to DJVU free?

Yes — Convertio offers free DST to DJVU conversion. No payment or registration needed.

Can I convert on mobile?

The converter works in any mobile browser — upload DST and download DJVU without apps.