
DMC palette & stitching suggestions
Herbal Floral Hanging Bundles
A gentle hoop design featuring five suspended herb-and-flower posies tied with tiny bows. The image reads as cottage-garden embroidery: fresh greens, airy hanging cords, purple lavender clusters, white daisies, pink ribbon roses, and one deeper berry-toned bouquet.
Color palette matched to the design
Use these DMC shades as a polished working palette. The design benefits from a restrained natural base, then brighter accents for bows, roses, daisies, and lavender sprigs.
Deepest herb stems, shadow leaves, and the darkest strokes inside each bundle.
Main leafy sprigs, rosemary-like needles, and full foliage areas.
Olive herb texture, seed stems, and muted greenery in the lower right bundle.
Pale hanging strings and cool highlights on trailing greenery.
Dark lavender clusters and the deepest grape-toned French knots.
Mid purple lavender petals, bow shadows, and shaded flower tips.
Soft lilac highlights on hanging lavender sprays and the purple bow.
Pink ribbon bows, rose outer petals, and soft floral highlights.
Warm rose highlights and peachy-pink blooms in the lower bouquet.
Deep magenta rose centers and the strongest berry flower accents.
Daisy petals, white bow, tiny filler blossoms, and lace-like pale details.
Daisy centers and a few sunlit seed dots; keep it bright but sparing.
Stitch map for each design element
| Element | Recommended stitches | Thread count & notes |
|---|---|---|
| Hanging cords | Back stitch, whipped back stitch, or couching for very straight lines. | Use 1 strand. Keep tension light so the vertical cords do not pucker the linen. |
| Ribbon bows | Stem stitch for loops, detached chain for soft bow petals, tiny straight stitches for tails. | Use 2 strands for pink and lilac bows; 1 strand for the fine trailing ribbon ends. |
| Herbal sprigs | Straight stitch, fly stitch, fishbone leaf, and stem stitch. | Use 2 strands for main greenery; add 1-strand dark green over-stitches for depth. |
| Lavender and grape clusters | French knots, colonial knots, lazy daisy, or short detached chain stitches. | Use 2 strands for plump knots. Mix DMC 550, 333, and 340 in uneven clusters. |
| Roses | Woven wheel rose, spider-web rose, bullion knots, or tight stem-stitch spirals. | Use 2 strands for woven roses; add DMC 915 in the center and 761 or 3688 outside. |
| Daisies | Detached chain petals with French-knot centers. | Use 2 strands white for petals, 2 strands yellow for centers. Keep petal lengths varied. |
| Tiny fillers | Seed stitch, French knots, and small straight stitches. | Use 1 strand in white, pale green, or lilac to keep filler flowers delicate. |
Shading, blending, and texture guidance
Greenery depth
- Begin with DMC 367 for the visible leaf mass.
- Add DMC 895 only where stems overlap or disappear beneath flowers.
- Use DMC 3011 for muted olive herb sprays so the bundles do not all look identical.
Lavender clusters
- Place dark knots first, then fill gaps with mid violet.
- Add a few DMC 340 knots at the lower edges to imitate light catching the tips.
- Keep knots irregular; perfectly spaced dots look less botanical.
Rose dimension
- Start woven roses with DMC 915 or a darker strand near the center.
- Switch to DMC 3688 and 761 on outer wraps for rounded petals.
- Do not pull woven wheels too tight; the raised texture is part of the charm.
Soft linen look
- Use off-white fabric or tea-toned linen for the warm heirloom feel.
- Leave breathing room around every bundle; the negative space is important.
- Press from the back on a towel after stitching to protect raised knots and roses.
Beginner-friendly stitching order
Transfer lightly
Mark cords, bow loops, flower centers, and main stems with a fine washable pen. Avoid heavy marks under pale white daisies.
Stitch structure first
Work hanging cords and main stems before adding flowers. This keeps the bundles aligned and prevents crowded stems.
Add raised texture last
Finish with French knots, woven roses, and daisy centers so dimensional stitches stay clean and untangled.
Practical floss and hoop tips
For a 6-inch hoop, prepare approximately one skein each of the main greens and purples, plus shorter lengths of pink, white, yellow, and plum. Use 12–16 inch floss lengths to reduce fuzzing, especially on knots and woven roses. Separate all six strands before recombining the number needed; this gives smoother stitches and cleaner bows.
A balanced approach is 1 strand for fine cords and outlining, 2 strands for most florals and leaves, and 3 strands only for a few statement knots or rose accents. Outline selectively: darker green around dense foliage, plum in rose centers, and no outline on white daisies unless the fabric is very pale and the petals need definition.
Designed as a practical DMC floss planning page for the Herbal Floral Hanging Bundles embroidery pattern.





