Boards that overlap each other to form a siding on a house.
Overlapping horizontal wood plank siding made from either rectangular or taped planks.
A horizontal siding (board) of varying widths originally fabricated in wood. It is fabricated and installed so the board above easily overlaps or appears to overlap the board underneath.
Wood siding composed of horizontal, overlapping boards, the lower edges of which are usually thicker than the upper.
A board installed horizontally as the exterior wall covering of a building. Also called bevel siding.
A type of exterior siding with thin horizontal boards. The bottom edge of each board overlaps the top edge of the board beneath it.
thin wood plank siding applied horizontally, one overlapping the next
a long thin board with one edge thicker than the other; used as siding by lapping one board over the board below
Siding use to clad the exterior of a building. Clapboards are installed by slightly overlapping boards that have one edge wider than another.
Clapboards are thin, narrow boards of tapering cross-section applied horizontally as siding on wood-frame houses. Each clapboard overlaps the one below, so that no joints are exposed to the weather.
A thin, narrow board with one edge thicker than the other, used as siding. CertainTeed siding brands offer clapboard-style siding in different exposures, several different textures, and even different panel projections.
wooden siding going horizontally across a house
Long thin overlapping wooden boards placed horizontally on the outside of a building
Tapered horizontal boards used as siding, thickest on their bottom edge; each overlaps the one below.
Long, thin, overlapping, horizontal wooden boards used on the exterior of framed construction as a waterproof exterior covering.
A handheld board that displays information about the scene to be shot.
A type of siding, typically cedar, composed of overlapping horizontal boards.
Small board which holds information identifying a shot: working title of the movie, names of director and DP, scene and take numbers, date, and time. Used at the beginning of a take, the clapboard has a hinged stick which is "clapped" to provide audio/visual synchronization.
An exterior wood siding having one edge thicker than the other and laid so that the thick butt overlaps the thin edge of the board below.
( planche à gorge) siding or cladding of bevelled boards laid horizontally and overlapping at the top and bottom, applied to the outside of a wood-framed building to make it weatherproof; the face of each board is oblique to the wall (also called bevelled siding).
Wood siding commonly used as an exterior covering on a building of frame construction; also known as lap siding.
Wood exterior siding that is thicker on one edge than the other. Comes in a variety of lengths. It is overlapped and nailed into sheathing.
A style of siding designed as a thin narrow board that is thicker at one edge than the other.
overlapping horizontal boards that cover the timber-framed wall of a house.
A small board which holds information identifying a shot.
A thin, narrow siding board applied horizontally on the exterior of a home. The board is somewhat wedge shaped with the lower edge fatter than the top. Each piece laps over the lower piece creating a rain proof connection.
is a long thin board (thicker on one edge) overlapped and nailed for exterior siding.
A board that is thin on one edge and thicker on the other. The boards are installed overlapping to form a weatherproof, exterior wall surface. (See Siding).
A LONG THIN BOARD, THICKER ON ONE EDGE, OVER-LAPPED AND NAILED ON FOR EXTERIOR SIDING.
a long, narrow board with one edge thicker than the other, overlapped to cover the outer walls of frame structures.
Siding, consisting of long, beveled, overlapping horizontal boards, usually cedar, which are usually tapered in thickness, with the thicker lower edge of one board overlapping the thinner top edge of the board below.
A board used for siding that is thicker at one edge.
Clapboard, also known as bevel siding or lap siding (with regional variants as to the exact definitions of these terms), is a board used typically for exterior horizontal siding that has one edge thicker than the other and where the board above laps over the one below. It is often found in New England architecture.