Stencil vs Blueprint - What's the difference?
stencil | blueprint |
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.
(intransitive) To print with a stencil.
A type of paper-based reproduction process producing white-on-blue images, used primarily for technical and architecture's drawings, now largely replaced by other technologies.
A print produced with this process.
(architecture, engineering, by extension) A detailed technical drawing (now often in some electronically storable and transmissible form).
(informal, by extension) Any detailed plan, whether literal or figurative.
To make a blueprint for.
To make a detailed operational plan for.
As nouns the difference between stencil and blueprint
is that stencil is a utensil that contains a perforated sheet through which ink can be forced to create a printed pattern onto a surface while blueprint is a type of paper-based reproduction process producing white-on-blue images, used primarily for technical and architecture's drawings, now largely replaced by other technologies.As verbs the difference between stencil and blueprint
is that stencil is (intransitive) to print with a stencil while blueprint is to make a blueprint for.stencil
English
(wikipedia stencil)Noun
(en noun)Derived terms
* stencil artSee also
* pochoirVerb
External links
* (commonslite)Anagrams
* *blueprint
English
(wikipedia blueprint)Alternative forms
* blue print, blue-printNoun
(en noun)Synonyms
* (paper-based technical drawing) cyanotype, schematic * (detailed technical drawing) schematic * (informal) road map, schematic, plan, layoutVerb
(en verb)- The architect blueprinted the renovation plan once the client had signed off.
- They blueprinted every aspect of the first phase of the operation.