posted 4 years ago
Thank you for posting this, r! I'd completely forgotten the open, sewn edge finish, and didn't know the completely enclosed one was known by that name. The ones I typically use - depending on what I'm making, are the pinked edge, the French, and the flat-felled. I've found that not only in clothes, but in totebags, first aid type sewing (heating pad/ hot water bottle covers, etc), and in filtering bags - like nut bags, reusable bouquet garni, and fruit/herb press bags, a French seam (with the bound edge on the inside, for first aid, or on the outside, for filtering) is my favorite, making cleaning easier on filtering bags and gentle but strong touch, on the first aid items.
The flat-felled seam is strong, neat, and very useful, but not in some seams, for my clothes. In inseams, it can be uncomfortably bulky, and tends to wear out faster, from rubbing, but outseams, side seams, and others like those really seem to benefit from the added strength.
"The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance."~Ben Franklin. "We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light." ~ Plato