Fraying
Also: frayed edges · unraveling · worn edges
Fraying is the unraveling of fabric edges where threads work loose and hang free, most often along hems, cuffs, collars, and unfinished seams. It can be incidental wear or an intended distressed look; when unintended it signals declining construction and weighs on both structural integrity and cosmetic appearance.
How to detect it
- Run a finger along hems and cuffs to catch loose, lifting threads
- Check collar points and pocket edges, where fraying starts early
- Decide if the edge is finished-then-worn or designed raw and distressed
Grade impact
Fraying is weighed under Cosmetic Appearance (20%) and Structural Integrity (25%). Light edge fuzz keeps an item near Very Good (7); heavy fraying that unravels a hem or eats into a cuff pushes it to Good (6) or Fair (5) — unless the raw edge is clearly by design.
Fixability
Often stabilized rather than reversed. A tailor can re-hem or overlock a fraying edge, and fray-check sealant halts unraveling, but lost threads don't return. Any re-hem shortens or alters the garment and should be noted.
How to disclose it
Distinguish designed from damaged ('hem fraying from wear, not distressing'). Buyers accept honest edge wear, but selling worn fraying as an intended raw hem invites disputes.
Fraying — frequently asked
- How do I know if fraying is a flaw or a design feature?
- Check whether the edge was originally finished. A hem or cuff that was sewn and has since unraveled is wear and lowers the grade. A raw, deliberately distressed edge built that way by the maker is design and is graded against the as-made state.
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