To form a seam upon or of; to join by sewing together; to unite.
To mark with something resembling a seam; to line; to scar.
To make the appearance of a seam in, as in knitting a stocking; hence, to knit with a certain stitch, like that in such knitting.
Each one of the four panels is stitched together at the seam.
The line at which fabric is sewn together to form 1 piece. General sewing term.
According to Federal Spec 751a entitled "Stitches, Seams & Stitchings", a seam is a series of stitches used to join two or more plies of fabric together. (Download English .PDF Version of Seam Types.)
The line of junction between two sections. Seams can be classified in three ways: According to their position on the shoe, as in center front seam, back seam, and side seam. According to the way the adjoining components meet each other, as in butted seam, lapped seam, etc. According to the type of stitching, as in back stitch, hem stitch, etc. [Webber, 1989] The line where two or more leather parts are joined through sewing. [Goubitz, 2001
A sew line where two pieces of fabrics are sewn together.
Area of the lunch box or bottle where the material, usually steel, is joined to form the complete body. For lunch boxes, the seam is usually located on the bottom band, except for some early boxes. For bottles, the seam is located at the back of the bottle, on the opposite side of the main graphics.
juncture of two members required to be watertight, as in hull-planking.
A line formed by the joining together of two separate pieces of the same or different materials at their edges, as with flexible-face fabric material or wood, metal, or plastic sheet. Also called butt joint.
The area directly between two receivers or diggers
The one-inch wide line around the middle of the kayak where the deck and hull are joined together, usually a different color than the deck or hull.
A way of stitching two pieces of fabric together.
a traditional unit of volume. A seam of grain was 8 bushels: this would be equivalent to 290.95 liters based on the British Imperial bushel, or 281.91 liters based on the older U.S bushel. Take your pick. The Anglo-Saxon word "seam" meant the load of a pack animal. (The same word also came to mean the stitching of the packsaddle, and that's the origin of our other uses of the word today.) We don't know how large the seam was in Saxon times, but it was equal to 8 bushels at least by the end of the thirteenth century. The seam continued in use to the early nineteenth century, but in later years it was more often called a quarter
the line made when two fabrics are sewn together and opened flat
The line along which pieces of cloth or leather are joined by sewing.
The junction line of metal that has passed through a hollow die, separated and rejoined at the exit point. Seams are present in all extruded hollows produced from the extrusion process and in many cases are not visible.
a stitched line that joins two garments parts together.
joint consisting of a line formed by joining two pieces
a slight depression in the smoothness of a surface; "his face has many lines"; "ironing gets rid of most wrinkles"
put together with a seam; "seam a dress"
a ridge formed in greenware where mold pieces join
a line formed by sewing together two pieces of material.
A sew line made by the attachment / assembly of two or more components.
The back of an envelope where it is glued together. Center Seam - on an Open End Catalog or Booklet where the seam runs down the middle of the back; Side Seam - on an Open End Catalog or Booklet where the seam is on the side of the envelope.
Refers to a bowler who can cause a ball to strike the pitch on the seam of the ball, thereby causing it to deviate in its delivery path prior to reaching the batsman.
A junction line where laminate flooring panels connect.
a mark on a bottle caused by glass assuming the shape of the mold where the two halves meet. IGCB
The join where two pieces of fabrics are sewn together.
the seam is exactly what it sounds like, it is two bodies of water that come together that are flowing in either opposite directions or at different speeds.
used to join pieces of fabric together
The splice line formed by two or more separate pieces of flexible polyurethane foam that have been bonded together.
Where two sections of a garment are joined. There are several types available, examples include serged, bound, taped, and NSR®. Go to top
A visible line of junction between two parts; a ridge made in joining two sheets or roofing.
Where two pieces of fabric are joined together with a stitched line.
The ridge of stitching that holds the two halves of a ball together, and causes deviation off the pitch when the ball lands. Seam bowlers, as opposed to swing bowlers, rely on movement off the pitch, rather than through the air
A seam, in sewing, is the line where two pieces of fabric are held together by thread. ;
A line, ridge, or groove formed from fitting, joining, or lapping two components.
the stitched equatorial seam of a cricket ball. sideways movement of the ball in its trajectory towards the batsman, caused when the ball bounces on the pitch, landing on the seam(1). That ball had some seam on it. v.t. to get the ball to move sideways by getting it to bounce on the pitch, landing on the seam(1). The bowler got movement by seaming the ball. v.i. (of the ball) to move sideways on bouncing because of seam(2). The ball seamed a long way. adj. describing a bowler who uses seam(2) to move the ball. He is a seam bowler.