Online Google Dictionary

stencil 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ˈstensəl/,
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stencils, plural;
  1. Decorate (a surface) with such a design
    • - the walls had been stenciled with designs
    • - the art of stenciling
  2. Produce (a design) with a stencil
    • - stencil a border around the door
    • - the stenciled letters
Noun
  1. A thin sheet of cardboard, plastic, or metal with a pattern or letters cut out of it, used to produce the cut design on the surface below by the application of ink or paint through the holes

  2. A design produced by such a sheet
    • - a floral stencil around the top of the room

  1. a sheet of material (metal, plastic, cardboard, waxed paper, silk, etc.) that has been perforated with a pattern (printing or a design); ink or paint can pass through the perforations to create the printed pattern on the surface below
  2. mark or print with a stencil
  3. A stencil is a used to draw or paint identical letters, numbers, symbols, shapes, or patterns every time it is used. Stencil technique in visual art is also referred to as pochoir. Stencils are formed by removing sections from template material in the form of text or an image. ...
  4. In mathematics, especially the areas of numerical analysis concentrating on the numerical solution of partial differential equations, a stencil is a geometric arrangement of a nodal group that relate to the point of interest by using a numerical approximation routine. ...
  5. Stencil refers to two typefaces released within months of each other in 1937. The face created by R. Hunter Middleton for Ludlow was advertised in June, while Gerry Powell's version for American Type Founders appeared one month later. ...
  6. A utensil that contains a perforated sheet through which ink can be forced to create a printed pattern onto a surface; A typeface looking as if made by the utensil.^W; To print with a stencil
  7. (stenciling) patterns/numbers/words created by masking area of a surface with a stencil and applying color to the exposed parts.
  8. (STENCILING) Application of a specific design by placing a cut-out design in front of the brush.
  9. (Stenciling) A method of applying paint to glass. (Dalle-De-Verre) Popular in 19th century. An inexpensive method to decorate large amounts of ecclesiastic glass.
  10. (Stenciling) Alphanumeric text, such as the Customer Name, stenciled on the pallet, usually on the Stringer. Stenciling helps to identify the pallet, its ownership, payload, etc.
  11. (Stenciling) The general term for the process in which an image is cut from paper or cardboard so that when inked, painted, or otherwise filled in, the image can be repeated throughout an edition. top
  12. (Stenciling) applying paint to a pre-cut pattern
  13. (Stenciling) the process by which lettering or a design through which a substance (ink, paint, or metallic powder) is forced onto a surface to be printed; commonly used to mark steel fabrications but generally does not remain after the galvanizing process
  14. (Stenciling) use of a stencil to produce a pictograph image. A common prehistoric stenciling technique involved blowing paint around a hand placed against an exposed rock surface to produce a "negative" stenciled image of the hand.
  15. (STENCILS) taking some form and using paint to get some message onto a surface. Very old use (industry) and now turned into some art.
  16. (Stencils) Template of a tattoo that is applied to the skin so the tattooist has a basic outline.
  17. (Stencils) a personal favorite, made from cardboard cut-outs and sprayed over to leave a perfect image, usually displaying some political statement, cool design or character.
  18. (Stencils) refers to ornaments with solid color bases that are decorated with a white stenciled design.  The stencils are most common to Shiny Brites, but do appear on other ornaments.  They usually depict a scene or saying, and come in a wide range of sizes and colors.
  19. (n.) A pattern of data accesses used when updating the values in a mesh. A stencil is usually represented as a grid around a central point, which indicates the location of the value being updated.
  20. A thin sheet of material containing openings to reflect a specific pattern, designed to transfer a paste-like material to a substrate for the purpose of component attachment.
  21. A tool used to apply a repeated image or pattern by dabbing paint on a commercial sponge or stippling brush over the negative space cut out of a sheet of mylar or stiff oak tag.
  22. A thin sheet of material into which a design is cut. When a stencil is place on another substrate and paint or ink is applied, the image represented by the cut-out portion of the stencil is printed on the substrate below it. Stencils range from metal to card stock to photo emulsions.
  23. a sheet of plastic, paper, or other material with letters or an image cut out of it. When placed on a surface and inked, it reproduces the cut-away images onto the material behind it. see also printing methods, screen printing
  24. A plastic pre-cut template used to trace and cut shapes. Usually used on paper and/or photos. They may also be used to apply paint/chalk to a surface in a contrasting colour.
  25. A method of applying a design by brushing ink or paint through a cut-out surface.