Hand-Rolled vs Machine Hem: What the Finish Says About Your Silk Scarf

Quick answer: A hand-rolled hem (roulotté) is rolled by hand and stitched with near-invisible silk thread, producing a soft, plump, slightly raised border — the finish used by Hermès and other luxury houses. A machine-sewn hem is stitched by machine, producing a clean, flat, consistent edge. Hand-rolled hems cost more and take longer. The right choice depends on the intended retail price and purpose of the finished scarf.

Run your finger along the edge of a Hermès scarf and you will feel something that a photograph cannot quite show. A gentle ridge. A softness where the edge becomes the border. A finish so carefully made that it has its own texture, distinct from the silk itself. That is a hand-rolled hem, and it is worth understanding — both what it is and when it actually matters.

Most people commissioning a custom silk scarf for the first time do not know to ask about hem finishing. It is one of those details that sounds minor until you understand what it actually does to the finished piece — and to the budget. Here is everything you need to decide.

What is a hand-rolled hem?

The roulotté — the French term for the hand-rolled hem used in luxury scarf production — is made by rolling the raw edge of the silk fabric into a narrow tube using the fingers, then securing it with individual stitches so fine they are nearly invisible from the right side of the scarf. The result is a soft, rounded border approximately 1 to 1.5cm wide that sits slightly raised from the surface of the scarf.

The technique is done using silk thread — specifically fine thread that blends with the fabric rather than contrasting with it — and a needle fine enough to catch only a few threads of the silk at a time. The stitch used is a slip stitch or roll stitch, worked at roughly 5 to 6 stitches per centimetre. Each corner requires particular skill: the fabric needs to be mitered and rolled in such a way that the corner lies flat and the roll continues uninterrupted around the turn.

A skilled artisan working at production pace produces roughly two to three scarves per hour on a standard 90 × 90cm square using this method. That labour time is reflected directly in the cost.

The slight variation from scarf to scarf that results from handwork is not a defect — it is a characteristic. A hand-rolled hem that is perfectly identical on every piece is a machine hem. The organic, almost imperceptible variation in the roll is part of what the technique produces, and part of what people who know silk are looking for.

What is a machine-sewn hem?

A machine-sewn hem is produced using an industrial sewing machine that folds and stitches the edge of the fabric in a single continuous pass. The result is a clean, flat, consistent edge — typically 3 to 5mm in visible width, depending on the fold used. It is uniform from the first scarf to the last, which is both its strength and its aesthetic limitation.

Machine hems are faster, more economical on larger runs, and entirely appropriate for a wide range of custom silk projects. They do not signal inferior quality — they signal a different priority. A scarf commissioned for a school project, an event gift, or a promotional programme is not the same object as one designed for a museum gift shop to retail at a premium price. The hem finish should match the context.

There are several variations within machine hemming, including straight-stitched flat hems and overlocked edges. The precise method used affects the appearance of the finished edge, and at LS Silk we can discuss which machine finish is most appropriate for your project’s purpose and price point.

What does the difference actually look and feel like?

The visual difference is subtle but real. A hand-rolled hem has that characteristic plump, tubular border — you can see the roll from the front of the scarf as a soft raised line that frames the design. The thread is almost invisible. The corner is a neat mitered fold, not a squared-off seam. When the scarf is held up to light, the edge has a slight three-dimensional quality that the machine hem does not.

A machine hem is flat against the scarf. The stitching is visible as a regular line running parallel to the edge. The finish is precise and consistent, but it does not add the textural dimension that the hand-rolled hem does. On a scarf where the print extends to the edge and the border is not a design feature, this rarely matters. On a scarf with a deliberate border design or one intended for premium retail, it can make a perceptible difference to how the piece reads in someone’s hand.

The feel in the hand is also different. A hand-rolled hem has a soft, rounded quality at the edge — the scarf feels finished all the way to the perimeter. A machine hem is crisp and flat. Neither is wrong. They feel like different things because they are different things.

When should you choose hand-rolled?

The hand-rolled hem is the right choice when the finished scarf is a considered luxury object — something that will be picked up, examined, and judged at the level of detail. Museum and gallery gift shop products, where customers are selecting a quality souvenir and the price reflects it. Artist editions where the finish of the piece is part of the maker’s statement. Premium corporate gifts where the scarf needs to feel genuinely generous rather than promotional.

It is also the right choice when the scarf design includes a deliberate border that frames the print — which is common in heritage-style square scarves. The hand-rolled hem softens the transition from print to edge in a way the machine hem does not quite achieve.

The retail price threshold where hand-rolling becomes worth the cost is roughly $100 and above. Below that, a well-executed machine hem serves the purpose. At that price point and above, customers who know quality will notice the finish — and those who do not know why will still feel the difference.

When is a machine hem the better choice?

When the print is the point and the edge is functional. When the quantity is large and the per-unit price matters more than the premium finish. When the scarves are promotional, event-based, or educational in purpose. When the timeline is tight and the hand-rolling process would add days that are not available. When the design itself does not include a border and the edge is meant to bleed quietly rather than be noticed.

Schools, corporate programmes, fundraising merchandise, and staff gifts are contexts where a machine hem is entirely appropriate. The scarf is still 100% silk, still digitally printed in the design’s full colour range, and still a genuinely luxurious object by any reasonable standard. The hem is simply not the feature that needs investment in those contexts.

Does momme weight affect which hem to choose?

Yes, and it is worth knowing. The hand-rolled hem performs best on fabric from 14mm upward. At lighter weights — particularly 8mm chiffon — the roll is achievable but more delicate, and the resulting hem is narrower and finer. At 14mm twill, the roll has more substance and produces the fuller, more classic result. At heavier weights of 16mm and above, the roll is at its most pronounced and sits most firmly against the edge of the scarf.

This is one reason fabric choice and hem choice are discussed together at the brief stage. If the project brief specifies both chiffon and a hand-rolled hem, the expectation for the finished edge needs to be set accordingly — the result will be more delicate than the same hem on twill, which for some designs is exactly right.


If you are unsure which hem finish is right for your project, the brief conversation is the right moment to discuss it. We will ask about the intended retail or gifting price, the design, the fabric, and the audience — and give you a straightforward recommendation.

Talk to us about your project →

Related reading: Silk twill vs crêpe de chine vs chiffon: which fabric for your custom scarf? · How much does a custom silk scarf cost in Australia?

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between a hand-rolled hem and a machine hem on a silk scarf?
A hand-rolled hem (roulotté) is rolled by hand and stitched with fine silk thread, producing a soft, rounded, slightly raised border approximately 1 to 1.5cm wide. It is the finish used by Hermès and other luxury houses. A machine-sewn hem is stitched by machine, producing a clean, flat, consistent edge. Hand-rolled hems cost more due to the skilled labour involved — a skilled artisan produces roughly two to three scarves per hour.

Why is the hand-rolled hem associated with luxury scarves?
The hand-rolled hem requires significant skill and time — each scarf is finished individually by hand, with stitches so fine they are nearly invisible from the right side. The result is a soft, plump border that adds a tactile dimension to the finished piece. Heritage scarf houses including Hermès have used this technique for generations, making it the recognised marker of premium craftsmanship in silk accessories.

When is a machine hem the right choice for a custom silk scarf?
A machine hem is appropriate when the scarf is promotional, event-based, educational, or produced in higher quantities where per-unit price matters more than premium finish. It is also suitable when the design does not include a deliberate border, or when the timeline does not allow for the additional production time that hand-rolling requires. The scarf is still 100% silk — the hem simply serves a different purpose.

Does the hem finish affect the cost of a custom silk scarf?
Yes, significantly. A hand-rolled hem requires skilled artisan labour at a rate of roughly two to three scarves per hour, which is directly reflected in the per-unit cost. A machine-sewn hem is considerably faster and therefore less expensive. For projects where the scarf will retail at $100 or above, the hand-rolled finish is usually the right investment. Below that threshold, a well-executed machine hem typically serves the purpose.

What is a roulotté hem?
Roulotté (also spelled roulottage) is the French term for the hand-rolled hem technique used in luxury silk scarf production. The edge of the fabric is rolled into a narrow tube using the fingers, then secured with individual slip stitches using fine silk thread. The word roulotté comes from the French for “rolled” and describes the characteristic rounded border the technique produces. It is the hem finish used by Hermès for its signature carré scarves.

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