Spring Daffodil and Tulip Floral Wreath
A cheerful hoop design with yellow daffodils, rosy tulips, soft blossom sprays, dark branching stems, and layered spring greenery arranged in an airy wreath. The palette below is estimated from the visible preview and matched to practical DMC embroidery floss shades for hand embroidery or mixed cross-stitch detailing.
Use the brightest yellows and pinks sparingly at the petal tips, then rely on medium tones for most filling. This keeps the wreath fresh and dimensional instead of overly flat.

Likely DMC Color Palette
The preview shows a warm linen ground, pale yellow daffodil petals, golden-orange centers, saturated pink tulips, tiny blush blossoms, deep brown twigs, and several layers of green foliage. Coverage percentages are visual estimates, not exact thread usage.
Daffodil Petal Light
DMC 307 · LemonUse for the brightest daffodil petal tops and soft sunlit edges.
Daffodil Petal Base
DMC 726 · Topaz LightMain daffodil fill; ideal for satin or cross-stitch blocks.
Golden Flower Shadow
DMC 725 · Topaz Medium LightAdd near petal bases, folds, and inner trumpet shadows.
Orange Trumpet Centers
DMC 741 · Tangerine MediumStrong accent for daffodil cups, centers, and raised knots.
Deep Center Detail
DMC 921 · CopperUse in small amounts for cup outlines and darkest orange texture.
Tulip Highlight Pink
DMC 3716 · Dusty Rose MediumSoft top stitches on tulip petals and pale blossom touches.
Tulip Mid Pink
DMC 3608 · Plum Very LightMain pink fill for tulip bodies and fuller blossom petals.
Tulip Deep Pink
DMC 3350 · Dusty Rose Ultra DarkUse for tulip separations, lower petals, and darker curved outlines.
Cherry Blossom Pale
DMC 761 · Salmon LightTiny flowers, bud highlights, and soft scattered spring petals.
Cherry Blossom Accent
DMC 962 · Dusty Rose MediumFor blossom centers, bud shading, and small pink clusters.
Leaf Green Medium
DMC 3346 · Hunter GreenMain leaf shade for the vertical blades and curved wreath greens.
Deep Foliage Green
DMC 3347 · Yellow Green MediumDark undersides, inner wreath depth, and leaf overlap shadows.
Fresh Leaf Highlight
DMC 368 · Pistachio Green LightBright leaf tips and new spring shoots around the wreath edge.
Branch Brown
DMC 838 · Beige Brown Very DarkWoody twigs, branch outlines, and anchors beneath blossom clusters.
Soft White Detail
DMC 3865 · Winter WhiteUse for pale blossoms, sparkle knots, and gentle petal highlights.
Stitching Suggestions
The wreath combines cross-stitch-style filled areas with hand-embroidery outlines and raised details. Work from structural greenery and branches first, then add large flowers, then finish with buds and tiny knots.
| Element | Recommended Stitch | Practical Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Wreath base greenery | Stem stitch, fishbone stitch, and straight stitch | Use 2 strands for broad leaves and 1 strand for fine tips. Angle stitches along the curve of the wreath so the foliage feels circular and natural. |
| Long blade leaves | Fishbone stitch or split stitch outline with satin fill | Place deep green on one side and a lighter green on the opposite edge. A single center vein in dark green gives each blade structure. |
| Daffodil petals | Satin stitch, long-and-short stitch, or neat cross stitches | Stitch petals outward from the trumpet. Blend DMC 307 and 726 for glowing tips, then add 725 near the center for folds. |
| Daffodil trumpets | Long-and-short stitch with French knots | Fill the cup with orange, then add 1-wrap French knots around the rim. Use copper only for the deepest inner ring and tiny outline accents. |
| Tulip heads | Long-and-short stitch with backstitched petal seams | Work each petal separately. Use lighter pink on upper curved areas, mid pink for the body, and deep rose along overlaps and lower edges. |
| Blossom sprays | Lazy daisy, detached chain, or small French knots | Alternate pale pink, dusty rose, and winter white. Keep knots small so the blossoms look delicate rather than bulky. |
| Woody branches | Backstitch, split stitch, or whipped backstitch | Use one strand for tiny twigs and two strands for stronger branches. Add the blossoms after branches are complete so the pink dots sit cleanly on top. |
| Scattered pollen dots | French knots or seed stitch | Use yellow, pale pink, or white with one strand. Scatter irregularly rather than spacing perfectly for a natural spring look. |
| Final outlines | One-strand backstitch | Outline only the most important petal folds and leaf separations. Too much outlining can make the soft wreath feel heavy. |
Thread Count, Blending & Shading
Thread-count guide
- 2 strands: main daffodil petals, tulip fills, medium leaves, and most visible wreath sections.
- 1 strand: branch twigs, petal seams, leaf veins, tiny buds, and delicate final outlines.
- 3 strands: optional for raised flower centers or very full French-knot clusters on larger hoops.
- Cross stitch areas: keep tension even and use 2 strands on medium linen or Aida for the gridded floral texture seen in the preview.
Blending ideas
- Blend one strand DMC 307 with one strand DMC 726 for creamy yellow daffodil highlights.
- Blend one strand DMC 3608 with one strand DMC 3716 for soft tulip midtones.
- Use one strand DMC 3346 with one strand DMC 368 for lively green leaf tips.
- For branches, use DMC 838 alone for crisp definition; do not overblend the tiny woody lines.
Shading placement
Keep the daffodil petals light at the outer tips and warmer near the orange trumpet. On tulips, place deep rose where petals overlap or tuck behind leaves. For greenery, use dark green inside the wreath ring and brighter greens toward the outside edges to create depth.
Texture suggestions
Combine smooth satin petals with knotty flower centers and fine stitched stems. The contrast between flat petal fills, raised French knots, and narrow branch lines is what gives the wreath its handmade spring character.
Beginner-Friendly Order of Work
Start with the skeleton
Lightly mark the wreath circle, then stitch the main green arcs and brown branches first. This gives every flower a clear place to sit and prevents the wreath from drifting out of shape.
Add the large blooms next
Complete daffodils and tulips before the tiny blossoms. Large flowers establish the color balance, so you can decide afterward where extra knots or buds are needed.
Save tiny accents for last
French knots, pollen dots, and small white blossoms can snag while you work. Add them in the final pass, after all filling and backstitching is finished.
Check from a distance
Every few sections, place the hoop on a table and step back. A wreath should feel balanced, but not perfectly symmetrical; a few uneven blossom clusters make it more natural.
Encouraging Finish
This design will shine with bright spring contrast: buttery yellow daffodils, rosy tulips, crisp dark twigs, and fresh layered leaves. Build the wreath in patient layers, keep the small blossoms light and airy, and let the French knots provide the final cheerful sparkle.





