How to fix carpet snags

Hi, does anyone know how I can easily get rid of carpet snags that my cats have made. I have tried cutting with scissors and using my husband's hair clippers which has worked a bit but its very time consuming and ultimately I think will ruin his clippers. Thanks.

Hello everyone, This is a fix I made on a "medium grade" rug, made with rows of stitching. Nicer plush rugs may not work for this. It also helps if the rug is a little multicolored to help hide your repairs. I'll go over a small and large snag, with photos. I already just about finished the large one when I decided to document it. Required materials: Scissors Flexible fabric glue (I opted for some that dries clear and flexible) Straight pins (or something similar, for the large pulls that yield long pieces of string/yarn/fiber) Scotch tape (as needed) Wax paper

Something heavy like a text book

First, cut some of the snag away. Just be sure you leave enough to cover the void that it created. Many times the snags fluff and fray and will never be the same shape they were originally.

Gently pull the snag aside and, using the fabric glue, place a small bead in the bottom of the hole. Use the tip of the glue pen or your finger to work the snag into the hole.

If possible, work the surrounding fibers into the hole to help cover it and look more full.

Place the wax paper over the glued snag and place a textbook-like object on top of it. My glue stated 2-4 hours dry time, so I just left it over night.

Now for the large snag...

Again, I apologize for the lack of step by step photos but this was an after thought. This snag was about a foot long and the yarn-like fibers came to be about a couple feet long (hard to tell, they're stretchy). It unravelled along a single row of stitching. It has a orange and green straight pin at either end in the first photo. I placed the straight pins at either end and wound the yarn about the pins until it looked like it filled in the void nicely. I taped off the excess incase I needed more as you can see in the second photo. I pressed the tip of the fabric glue pin between the wound section and the normal, carpet section and applied a line along both ends for the entire length. I also added a generous amount around either pin because I was paranoid of it coming undone when the pins came out. I also had to add some glue here and there because the top layers weren't touching any glue. I basically created a semi-flexible patch in the rug using the pulled out yarn. While it doesn't feel exactly like the rug around it, it is flexible and won't stab bare feet or anything.

I put wax paper and a book on top as stated before in the same fashion and inspected my results the next day. Trim excess as needed, remove tape and pins.

Can you find it? This photo contains the repaired long snag and a few small ones like in the beginning (Sigh... Lilli the Beagle...) While not ideal it is much cheaper than a new 6x8 ft rug and since it is in my computer room/guest room I'm quite happy with it. Hope this helps! PS: Bonus Tip.

Bleach spots on the bathroom rug? Keep a multicolored pack of permanent markers on hand to color in those bleach spots.

  • How to fix carpet snags
  • How to fix carpet snags
  • How to fix carpet snags

How to fix carpet snags
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If a pet's claw or other sharp object has pulled a loop of yarn up out of your Berber carpet, you can repair it with a couple of simple tools and some patience. Berber consists of long strands of yarn woven in and out of the holes in a sheet of backing material. Repairing a snag is similar to working a loop of yarn back into a sweater.

  1. 1

    Look closely at the pulled loop of carpet. Identify where the yarn is woven into the backing material and where it comes out to form the next loop. You may need to pull on the snagged loop to identify where the yarn goes next.

  2. 2

    Place one knitting needle, screwdriver, or other long, thin tool through the snagged loop of carpet. This will prevent you from pulling the loop all the way through the backing.

  3. 3

    Using another knitting needle, screwdriver, or other long, thin tool, pull up the next loop in the carpet so that the snagged loop is pulled back down. This may take some force. Leave the original snagged loop just slightly larger than the surrounding loops of carpet, so that the newly pulled-out loop is slightly smaller than the original snag.

  4. 4

    Repeat this process, weaving the yarn through the backing, each time making the new pulled-out loop of carpet just a little smaller than the previous one. Eventually you can work the snag back into the fabric of the carpet. The amount of time and number of loops this will take depends on how big the original snag is.

  5. 5

    Alternately,If the Berber yarn has thrown more than a few loops, the row (s) can be cut and a new thread section can be re-adjusted in the area that needs repair.

  6. 6

    Cut the area that needs repair. This can be accomplished if you have some left-over berber from when the carpet was originally installed. If not, a small closet can be used for "donor" material.

  7. 7

    Either way, use a new, sharp utility knife and cut out the backing of the area that needs repairing. Cut close to the good rows of yarn without cutting into them. Take your donor carpet and match the pattern to the repair area. Cut a patch to fit the repair area, test fit, remove, put blob of hot glue in area of repair, place piece back into repair. Make sure repaired section is level with surrounding berber.

    • If small snags are noted anywhere in berber, use sharp tool and gently press snag to where it is level with surrounding yarn.

  • Two long, thin, stiff metal tools, such as knitting needles, ice pick or screwdrivers.

wikiHow is a “wiki,” similar to Wikipedia, which means that many of our articles are co-written by multiple authors. To create this article, 10 people, some anonymous, worked to edit and improve it over time. This article has been viewed 110,785 times.

Co-authors: 10

Updated: November 5, 2020

Views: 110,785

Article Rating: 93% - 14 votes

Categories: Carpet and Rug Repairs

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  • How to fix carpet snags

    "This article was very helpful because I never thought of pulling the loop back through the carpet and I knew that cutting off the snag would be a mistake that would leave the backing bare."