Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges

Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges

Raised fuzzy edge tufts visible along carpet tile seams caused by edge-finishing and tile cutting characteristics under directional lighting.

Fuzzy edges

Sierra Exif JPEG

Fuzzy edges

Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 3

Before correction

Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 28

Shearing correction

Sierra Exif JPEG

Fuzzy edges

Sierra Exif JPEG

Fuzzy edges

Sierra Exif JPEG

Fuzzy edges

Sierra Exif JPEG

Fuzzy edges

Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 2

Fuzzy edges

Sierra Exif JPEG

Fuzzy edges

Sierra Exif JPEG

Uninstalled material-fuzzy edges

Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 66
Sierra Exif JPEG
Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 665
Sierra Exif JPEG
Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 667
Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 668
Raised fuzzy edge tufts visible along carpet tile seams caused by edge-finishing and tile cutting characteristics under directional lighting. Sierra Exif JPEG Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 3 Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 28 Sierra Exif JPEG Sierra Exif JPEG Sierra Exif JPEG Sierra Exif JPEG Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 2 Sierra Exif JPEG Sierra Exif JPEG Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 66 Sierra Exif JPEG Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 665 Sierra Exif JPEG Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 667 Carpet Tile Fuzzy Edges 668

Fuzzy Edges / Raised Edge Tufts (Carpet Tile)

Floor Detective® Claims and Conditions Guide

Summary

Fuzzy edges, also referred to as raised edge tufts, are appearance-related conditions in which yarns or loops extend slightly above the surrounding pile surface along carpet tile perimeters. The condition typically develops during tile cutting, beveling, or edge-finishing processes where face yarns are intersected at the tile edge and may become more visible after installation due to lighting direction, tile orientation, traffic exposure, or grooming. The condition is cosmetic in nature and does not indicate backing failure, seam separation, or loss of structural performance. See also Top Cuts, High/Low Row Variation, and Carpet Problems for broader context.

Please subscribe to see all content

Carpet Problems

Carpet problems may involve seams, backing systems, texture changes, traffic wear, mechanical damage, or installation-related conditions.
Read More
Carpet Problems

Carpet Fiber Identification (Field and Laboratory Methods)

Carpet fiber identification helps determine how carpet may respond to heat, moisture, cleaning chemistry, abrasion, and environmental exposure.
Read More
Carpet Fiber Identification (Field and Laboratory Methods)

Wool and Wool Carpet Properties

Wool carpet properties include moisture absorption, chemical sensitivity, shedding, and appearance variation associated with natural wool fibers.
Read More
Wool and Wool Carpet Properties

Carpet Beetle Damage

Carpet beetle damage is localized fiber loss caused by larvae feeding on organic materials within carpet, often occurring in concealed...
Read More
Carpet Beetle Damage

Fiber Properties

Carpet fiber properties determine durability, resilience, and how flooring performs under traffic and environmental conditions.
Read More
Fiber Properties

Missing Row

Carpet missing rows are manufacturing-origin tufting conditions involving absent yarn along machine-direction rows.
Read More
Missing Row

Browning

Browning and soil wicking are discoloration conditions caused by moisture-driven migration of materials to the carpet surface during drying.
Read More
Browning

Wrinkles in Backing

Carpet backing wrinkles are manufacturing-related distortions caused by backing misalignment, tension variation, or latex lock-in.
Read More
Wrinkles in Backing

Unraveling / Runs (Carpet)

Carpet unraveling runs are progressive yarn withdrawals that follow tuft rows in continuous filament carpet constructions.
Read More
Unraveling / Runs (Carpet)

Core Crush / Roll-Core Pile Reversal (Carpet)

Carpet roll-core crush occurs when pile yarns become compressed around the roll core, creating visible light or dark banding near...
Read More
Core Crush / Roll-Core Pile Reversal (Carpet)