Selvedges: A small TRC reference collection
Fig. 1. Plain weave with selvedge to the right.Why bother about selvedges? Who cares? These are just a few of the comments I heard when I said that the TRC has a reference box for all sorts of selvedges.
To be short: Selvedges are important. They are an essential part of a piece of woven cloth. Below there are some thoughts of Alice van Duijnen, the TRC’s indefatigable weaving and knitting specialist.
Fig. 2. Brown hessian cloth with selvedge to the right, with a narrow purple selvedge stripe and double warps (TRC 2023.0849b).Selvedge is the term for the two self-finishing sides of a normal piece of woven fabric. It is the edge where the weft threads return in the opposite direction into the warps of the weave (Fig. 1). A 'normal' piece of hand woven cloth has two selvedges and two borders.
A selvedge occurs 'naturally'. But it also prevents the cloth from unraveling and fraying along two of its sides. It may have extra strengthening or embellishment. A sample in the TRC collection (Fig. 2. TRC 2023.0849b) has a coloured thread, for embellishment, and doubled warp threads for strengthening).








