Six Elixirs Witches Potion Bottle Hoop Art

Six Elixirs Witches Potion Bottle Hoop Art - DMC Palette & Stitching Guide
Six Elixirs  Witches' Potion Bottle Hoop Art
DMC palette • stitch planning • beginner friendly

Six Elixirs Witches Potion Bottle Hoop Art

A polished embroidery color and stitching guide for a magical hoop filled with glass potion bottles, jewel-toned liquids, cork stoppers, starbursts, bubbles, sparkle dots, and swirling elixir textures.

Mood: whimsical witchy Best fabric: natural linen or cotton Skill level: confident beginner Palette: teal, aqua, violet, cork brown, gold

Color story observed from the design

The artwork is built around six small potion bottles arranged in a clustered hoop composition. The strongest colors are saturated turquoise and violet elixirs, with deep navy-purple shadow swirls in the front bottle. The bottles are outlined in charcoal gray/black, but the glass itself is kept pale with white and cool gray highlights so it still feels transparent.

Warm cork browns and golden starbursts balance the cool magic colors. Small dots in purple, teal, and gold give the design a lively, enchanted look without requiring difficult stitches.

Palette strategy: keep the bottles airy. Use the darkest values mostly for outlines, lower potion shadows, cork grooves, and the spiral center so the glass does not become visually heavy.

Recommended supplies

  • 6-inch or 7-inch hoop for comfortable spacing around the bottles.
  • Natural linen, cotton-linen, or firm quilting cotton in ivory/oatmeal.
  • No. 7 embroidery needle for 2–3 strands; No. 9 for 1-strand details.
  • Water-soluble pen or fine transfer paper for small stars and bubbles.
  • Optional metallic gold thread for a few extra sparkle accents.

Polished DMC floss palette

Use these colors as practical matches for the visible artwork. Exact dye lots and screen colors vary, so choose the closest floss you own and keep the value relationships: bright aqua highlights, rich teal mids, deep purple shadows, warm cork browns, and a restrained dark outline.

DMC 3846
Bright Turquoise
Main turquoise potion areas and glowing blue-green bubbles.
DMC 3844
Dark Bright Turquoise
Lower teal shadows, bottle-side depth, and darker wave edges.
DMC 959
Medium Seagreen
Soft aqua highlights on the right bottle and light swirl strokes.
DMC 958
Light Seagreen
Brightest aqua glints, foam-like curves, and tiny sparkle dots.
DMC 550
Very Dark Violet
Deep purple potions, starbursts, and front-bottle spiral shadows.
DMC 552
Medium Violet
Purple midtones, side bottle fill, and blended motion lines.
DMC 554
Light Violet
Purple highlights, reflected glass tints, and lighter potion streaks.
DMC 823
Very Dark Navy Blue
Deepest spiral center, under-liquid shadows, and magical contrast.
DMC 3799
Very Dark Pewter Gray
Softer black bottle outlines, chain knots, and glass neck definition.
DMC 646
Dark Beaver Gray
Glass rim shadows, bottle bases, and muted gray contour shading.
DMC 762
Very Light Pearl Gray
Pale glass highlights and soft reflections beside white glints.
DMC Blanc
White
Sharp sparkle crosses, glass shine, and high points on potion waves.
DMC 898
Very Dark Coffee Brown
Cork outlines, grooves, dark cork ends, and bottle neck bands.
DMC 976
Golden Brown
Main cork fill and warm wooden texture lines.
DMC 977
Light Golden Brown
Cork highlights and warm bands around stoppers.
DMC 3852
Very Dark Straw
Gold stars, tiny magic sparks, and optional accent dots.

Stitch plan by design area

AreaBest stitchesThread count
Bottle outlinesBack stitch for clean curves; whipped back stitch on the front bottle for a smoother glass silhouette.1–2 strands
Glass rims & basesShort back stitch plus tiny straight stitches in gray and white for reflected edges.1 strand
Potion fillsLong-and-short stitch, satin stitch in small sections, or directional split stitch for controlled coverage.2 strands
Swirling elixirStem stitch or split stitch spirals, changing colors every partial round.2 strands; 1 for final highlights
CorksHorizontal satin stitch with darker straight-stitch grooves.2–3 strands
Stars & sparklesStraight stitches crossed at the center; French knots for tiny dots.1–2 strands

Thread-count guidance

  • 1 strand: tiny glass highlights, dots, bottle neck details, small sparkle arms, inner gray lines.
  • 2 strands: most outlines, potion fills, swirl lines, purple and teal motion strokes.
  • 3 strands: cork tops or slightly bolder golden stars if the pattern is enlarged.
  • 6 strands: avoid for this design except very large transfers; it will overwhelm the bottle details.
Beginner tip: stitch all dark outlines after the fill areas are finished. This tidies wobbly edges and makes the bottles look crisp.

Blending & shading ideas

Teal elixirs

Blend DMC 3846 with 959 for bright aqua surfaces, then drop to 3844 near the lower edges. Add a few single-strand 958 strokes on top of the filled area to imitate shine.

Purple elixirs

Use DMC 552 as the main midtone, shade the lower edges and spiral center with 550, then add soft 554 streaks where the potion appears to catch light.

Front spiral bottle

Stitch the spiral first in 823 or 550, then echo around it with 552, 3844, and 3846. Keep the turns loose and uneven so it feels like a liquid vortex rather than a flat target.

Outlining details

  • Use DMC 3799 instead of pure black for the main bottle outlines; it looks less harsh against pale linen.
  • Add DMC 646 only on one side of each bottle rim and base to suggest curved glass thickness.
  • Keep the upper glass shoulders partly open, with only a few white or pearl-gray highlights.
  • For chain or tied-neck accents, use tiny back stitches and French knots in 3799.

Texture suggestions

  • Cork: horizontal satin stitch, then irregular dark grooves.
  • Liquid: directional stitches that follow the wave line.
  • Glass: sparse highlights, not solid fill.
  • Magic dust: French knots in violet, teal, and gold.

Order of stitching

Transfer the major bottle outlines, liquid lines, cork shapes, and sparkle positions lightly.
Fill the potion colors first, working back bottles before the front bottle.
Add cork texture and neck bands after the liquids are complete.
Outline bottles, rims, bases, and tiny hanging details.
Finish with bubbles, stars, white highlights, and final sparkle knots.

Hoop-finishing notes

  • Press from the back over a towel so stitches stay raised.
  • Trim loose dark threads carefully; they can shadow through pale fabric.
  • Back the hoop with felt or card to hide traveling threads.
  • Leave a little empty fabric around the stars so the design breathes.

Beginner-friendly practical tips

  • Shorten satin stitches: potion areas are rounded, so split large fills into small sections to avoid snagging and loose threads.
  • Anchor discreetly: avoid carrying dark thread behind pale glass. Start and stop often instead.
  • Use the photo as value guidance: the lower potion edges and the front spiral are the darkest areas; the upper glass stays light and open.
  • Make stars last: gold and white sparkles sit on top visually. Adding them at the end keeps them bright and clean.
  • Do not overfill the glass: a few white and gray strokes are more convincing than solid stitching inside every bottle wall.
Simple upgrade: replace just two or three gold star stitches with metallic thread. Too much metallic can stiffen the design, but tiny accents make the potion bottles feel magical.

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