My New [selvage] Visvim Denim
Myyyyyyy Raaaaawwww Visvims
walk through my front door
and roll all over Extra butter’s floors
Im at a nice stage, with these fades
All the stacks stayed an my wiskers look paid
And out of selvage they were made
I love my denims and i will not trade
They were cut the by the hands of some slaves in japan
these shyts could withstand any chain of command
My man A-Lex gottem for cheap
we make a good team my Visvims and me
we get around together, honeycombs forever
indigo will run when worn in bad weather
My Visvims!
Selvage denim (also called selvedge denim) is a type of denim which forms a clean natural edge that does not unravel. It is commonly presented in the unwashed or raw state. Typically, the selvage edges will be located along the out-seam of the pants, making it visible when cuffs are worn. Although selvage denim is not completely synonymous with unwashed denim, the presence of selvage typically implies that the denim used is a higher quality.
The word “selvage” comes from the phrase “self-edge”, the natural edge of a roll of fabric. In this case, denim made on old-style shuttle looms. These looms weave fabric with one continuous cross thread (the weft) that is passed back and forth all the way down the length of the bolt. As the weft loops back into the edge of the denim it creates this “self-edge” or Selvage. Selvage is desirable because the edge can’t fray like lower grade denims that have separate wefts which leave an open edge that must be stitched. Shuttle looming is a more time-consuming weaving process that produces denim of a tighter weave resulting in a heavier weight fabric that lasts.
Shuttle looms weave a more narrow piece of fabric, and thus a longer piece of fabric is required to make a pair of jeans (approximately 3 yards). To maximize yield, traditional jean makers use the fabric all the way to the selvage edge. When the cuff is turned up the two selvage edges, where the denim is sewn together, can be seen. The selvage edge is usually stitched with colored thread: green, white, brown, yellow, and red (red is the most common). Fabric mills used these colors to differentiate between fabrics.
Most selvage jeans today are dyed with synthetic indigo, but natural indigo dye is available in smaller niche denim labels such as Evisu. Though they are supposed to have the same chemical makeup, there are more impurities in the natural indigo dye. Loop dying machines feed a rope of cotton yarn through vats of indigo dye and then back out. The dye is allowed to oxidize before the next dip. Multiple dips create a deep dark indigo blue.
In response to increased demand for jeans in the 1950′s, American denim manufacturers replaced the old shuttle style looms with modern projectile looms. The new looms produced fabric faster and wider (60-inches or wider), yet lighter and less durable. Synthetic dyeing techniques along with post-dye treatments were introduced to control shrink and twist.














January 26, 2009 at 10:40 pm
Helllll yeah!
Myyyyy visvim
Go out and eat some dim-sum
If I spill em on my jeans I won’t wash ‘um
Oh wait was that Chinese? I meant some sushi
Jeans straight from Japan still got the tags from delivery
See me? I got high fidelity in these jeans
Quality contstruction from the buttons to the selvage seem
I’m not going to lie these shits are raw
My next pair will be selvage for sure