Cozy Picnic Blanket Hoop
A warm picnic-themed hand embroidery design featuring a red-and-white checked blanket, woven basket, little treats, greenery, flowers, and a sweet string of garland lights.
Preview

This guide is based on the visible embroidery preview: a picnic scene stitched on neutral fabric inside a hoop. The main focus is a diagonal red-and-white blanket with a basket, bottle, jar, small plate of pastries, fruit or berries, surrounding green plants, peach flowers, and a curved strand of red and white hanging decorations above.
Likely DMC Color Palette
The coverage percentages are visual estimates from the preview image, intended to help plan floss colors. They are not exact thread usage, stitch counts, or a substitute for a pattern’s official materials list.
| DMC | Approx. Hex | Thread Name | Est. Coverage | Where It Appears |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 321 | #B33A32 | Red | 22% | Dominant red checks and outlines on the picnic blanket, bottle wrap, small berries, and garland ornaments. |
| B5200 | #F2F0EA | Snow White | 18% | White blanket squares, light garland puffs, small blossoms, and highlight stitches on dishes or food. |
| 938 | #5C2F25 | Ultra Dark Coffee Brown | 13% | Deep basket shadows, handle outlines, bottle details, dark stems, and the strongest woven accents. |
| 433 | #8B4A2B | Medium Brown | 11% | Basket weaving, picnic basket sides, handle mid-tones, and warm outlines around bread or pastries. |
| 895 | #2F5C3A | Very Dark Hunter Green | 10% | Dense greenery around the blanket, darker leaf clusters, evergreen-like sprigs, and grass shadows. |
| 470 | #4F7A45 | Light Avocado Green | 7% | Lighter leaves, stems, soft background greenery, and small plant details beside the basket. |
| 782 | #D8893A | Topaz Dark | 6% | Pastries, croissant-like shapes, bread, basket highlights, and the warm drink or jar glow. |
| 948 | #F2B38E | Very Light Peach | 5% | Peachy flower heads, soft floral accents, and delicate warm highlights in the picnic foods. |
| 762 | #A8B7B7 | Very Light Pearl Gray | 4% | Cool shadows in the white blanket squares, plate edges, fringe, and tiny gray-blue highlight areas. |
| 3799 | #1F2D30 | Very Dark Pewter Gray | 4% | Fine outlines on the bottle cap, plate rims, small shadow accents, and deepest detail lines. |
Stitching Suggestions
Checked picnic blanket
Use satin stitch or long-and-short stitch for the white squares, then work the red grid lines with stem stitch or split stitch. Keep the rows angled consistently so the blanket reads as a flat cloth in perspective.
Basket and handle
Use short satin stitches, split stitch, or tiny woven filling stitches to imitate wicker. Alternate medium and dark browns so the basket has texture without becoming too heavy.
Food, jar, and bottle
Small satin stitches work well for pastries and berries. Use back stitch for narrow outlines, then add one or two light highlight stitches to keep the objects readable at hoop scale.
Greenery and flowers
Try lazy daisy, fishbone stitch, and detached straight stitches for the leafy border. The peach flowers can be built with short radiating straight stitches or small satin petals.
Garland strand
Work the cord with a fine back stitch or couching, then add the red and white hanging pieces with small satin stitches, French knots, or padded knots depending on how dimensional you want them.
Fringe and tiny details
Use single strands or two strands for the blanket fringe and delicate outlines. These small accents should feel light, especially near the lower edge where the design already has many intersecting lines.
Where to Start
- Begin with the blanket outline and the main red grid, since it anchors the whole picnic scene and sets the diagonal perspective.
- Add the basket next, building the medium brown base first and saving the darkest brown for the final woven shadows.
- Stitch the bottle, jar, plate, berries, and bread shapes after the basket so the small objects sit neatly on top of the blanket.
- Move outward to the greenery and flowers, balancing dark leaves on both sides before adding lighter green and white blossom accents.
- Finish with the overhead garland, blanket fringe, highlights, and any final outline stitches that sharpen the design.
Helpful Notes
- Because the checked blanket is the largest visual element, use a consistent stitch direction in each color area to keep the surface tidy.
- For the basket, do not worry about making every woven mark identical. Slight variations in brown stitch length will make it look more natural.
- Use fewer strands for the garland cord, stems, fringe, and small outlines so they stay crisp against the neutral fabric.
- The white areas in the preview include both bright white and soft gray shadow. A few pale gray stitches can prevent the blanket squares from looking flat.
- If substituting colors, keep the contrast between red blanket lines, white squares, dark greenery, and brown basket strong; that contrast is what makes the little picnic scene readable.
All palette choices and coverage percentages are approximate visual estimates from the preview. Actual floss needs may vary with fabric size, strand count, stitch density, and personal stitching style.
Encouraging Finish
This is a charming project to stitch slowly: the red checked blanket gives it a cheerful center, while the basket, pastries, flowers, and garland add little moments of personality. Take the details one cluster at a time, and let the scene build from simple shapes into a cozy picnic hoop with plenty of handmade warmth.





