We have investigated silicon-germanium (SiGe) line structures employing metallic apertures in combination with Raman spectroscopy to obtain high-spatial strain resolution below the diffraction limit. The apertures were cut into specifically shaped electrochemically etched tungsten tips, which were adjusted within the Raman laser beam on the sample surface by a tuning fork atomic force microscope. With this setup, line structures on patterned SiGe films with a center-to-center distance down to 200 nm were resolved in the Raman scans, evidently indicating a resolution clearly below the far-field Raman resolution of about 600 nm for the used instrument. This setup allows improved local strain analysis by Raman spectroscopy and shows potential for further near-field Raman applications.