A seam finish is a treatment that secures and neatens the raw edges of a plain seam to prevent raveling, by sewing over the raw edges or enclosing them in some sort of
binding. On mass-produced clothing, the seam allowances of plain seams are usually finished with an
overlock stitch using a
serger, which trims the seam allowance as it stitches. Plain seams may also be pressed open, with each seam allowance separately secured with an overlock stitch. Traditional home sewing techniques for finishing plain seams include trimming with
pinking shears, oversewing with a
zig-zag stitch, and hand or machine
overcasting. A
bound seam has each of the raw edges of its seam allowances enclosed in a strip of fabric, lace or net 'binding' that has been folded in half lengthwise. An example of binding is double-fold
bias tape. The binding's fold is wrapped around the raw edge of the seam allowance and is stitched, through all layers, catching underside of the binding in stitching. for a type of bound seam in which each raw edge of the seam allowance is separately encased in a fabric binding. In
couture sewing or
tailoring, the binding is usually a
bias-cut strip of lightweight
lining fabric; in home sewing, commercial
bias tape is often used. In a Hong Kong finish, a bias strip of fabric is cut to the width of the seam allowance plus . The bias strip is placed on top of the seam allowance, right sides together, and stitched from raw edges. The bias strip is then folded over the raw edge and around to the underside and stitched in place. File:Bound seam1.png|Bound seam – The binding is wrapped around each raw edge and sewn in place with one line of stitching. File:Hong Kong finish.png|Hong Kong finish ==Position==