You can make an enormous difference in ambient noise with most any Fender product-
With a strat, best results come from shielding the inside of the plastic single coil pickups covers, the cavities the pickups/pots, etc. sit in themselves, good solid sting/bridge ground, and the underside of the pickguard-all of these should test for continuity on a multi meter.
the inside of the plastic pickup covers works great!-
if yours are original/vintage, set them aside , and shield some replacement covers-do it with shielding paint, and don't make a mess...use electrical tape to protect the coil wires from shorting-make sure to connect the now shielded covers to the grounded shielding circuit-I use a thin piece of copper shielding tape.
When shielding with tape on the backside of the pickguard, make sure you have a connection with the rest of your ground circuit, or it will not work!
-easiest to run shielding paint up and over the edge of the cavity to make physical contact with the foil on the backside of the pickguard.
Be careful with shielding around the output jack-
when the cable is inserted, the jack must have room to expand without shorting...
remember that shielding works like a sonic raingutter...
trapping ambient interference, and draining it to earth...
more like a lightning rod, than 'armor'
-any part of your circuit -foil, shielding paint, strings, metal hardware, etc.- that is not part of a universally grounded shield is at risk of receiving & creating noise than collecting & channeling it away from your coveted tone.
cheers from Drac