Seam slippage is the pulling away or separation of the fabric at the seam, causing gaps or holes to develop. It involves warp and weft threads pulling apart, but not yarn breakage.
A self-enclosed seam is a seam that does not result in a raw edge but a finished, enclosed seam. See related links for more details.
Isostasy
The slippage in the economy in the 1920 in United States was as a result of better machines for production. There was advancement in media technology as well which played an integral role in the spillage.
its seam sealer
seam to seam
It means that an input of 1 unit should result in an output of 1.8 units. The exact output depends on whether the ratio is adjusted for "leakages". In any real machine, some of the force is used up to overcome friction, slippage and so on.
The three types of seam are Plain seam, French seam and Ancient or Old German flat seam.
a curved seam is a seam that is curved
Slippage
Weight machines can malfunction. A common problem is weight slippage, which may in turn result in a strained muscle as the weights fall.
An open seam is a general purpose seam. An open seam is two pieces of fabric sewn together, and then the seam allowances are pressed open, creating a flat and clean seam line on the right side of the fabric.