Hemstitch

Hemstitch or hem-stitch is a decorative drawn thread work or openwork hand-sewing technique for embellishing the hem of clothing or household linens. Unlike an ordinary hem, hemstitching can employ embroidery thread in a contrasting color so as to be noticeable.

Hemstitched handkerchief.
Ladder Hemstitch

In hemstitching, one or more threads are drawn out of the fabric parallel and next to the turned hem, and stitches bundle the remaining threads in a variety of decorative patterns while securing the hem in place. Multiple rows of drawn thread work may be used.[1][2]

Hand hemstitching can be imitated by a hemstitching machine which has a piercer that pierces holes into the fabric and two separate needles that sew the hole open. There are also hemstitcher attachments for home sewing machines, and simple decorative stitches can be used over drawn threads to suggest hand-hemstitching.[3]

Notes

  1. Dillmont (1884), p. 24
  2. Reader's Digest (1992), pp. 78–83
  3. Reader's Digest (1992), p. 101
gollark: Random idea: maybe people's belief in the bystander effect *causes* the bystander effect.
gollark: Unless the universe is just being simulated by accident as part of solving some complex optimization problem or something weird like that.
gollark: Basically the only universal is probably that less computation is preferred.
gollark: The laws of physics their computers run on might happen to allow some specific computations to run very fast, or make it run very slowly.
gollark: A lot of the ideas around stuff which might be an optimization in our universe do sort of assume that the universe simulating us works similarly.

References

  • Dillmont, Thérèse de (1884). Encyclopedia of Needlework.
  • Reader's Digest (1992). Complete Guide to Needlework. Reader's Digest Association, Inc. ISBN 0-89577-059-8.
  • Media related to hemstitch at Wikimedia Commons
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