
DMC palette & hand embroidery guide
Embroidered Snowflake And Winter Foliage Hoop Art
A frosty winter hoop built around a dimensional blue snowflake, icy white crystal accents, pine sprigs, bright red berry clusters, and a soft dusting of blue snow dots. This guide keeps the palette cool and clean while adding enough greens and reds to make the wreath feel festive.
Suggested DMC Color Palette
Use these shades as a practical floss map. The design benefits from crisp icy blues, quiet white highlights, deep pine greens, and small berry-red accents.
White
Raised snowflake highlights, small side snowflakes, and bright sparkle stitches. Use 2 strands for clean snow crystals or 3 strands for padded snowy texture.
Very Light Sky Blue
Soft inner facets of the large snowflake. Excellent for long-and-short fill where you want an icy, translucent effect.
Light Bright Turquoise
Mid-tone shading on snowflake arms and pale blue outlining. Blend with Blanc for frosted edges.
Dark Turquoise
Main blue outlines, center star definition, and the deeper blue knots around the wreath. Use sparingly to keep the snowflake delicate.
Very Dark Turquoise
Shadow points at snowflake tips and darker blue clusters. One strand is ideal for fine definition lines.
Medium Pine Green
Primary evergreen needles and leaf stems. Works beautifully in fishbone stitch for dense pine sprigs.
Medium Green Gray
Secondary foliage highlights on pine needles. Alternate with 3363 to avoid a flat green mass.
Dark Green Gray
Muted outer needles and lower shadow leaves. Use 1 strand over the darker green for a realistic evergreen texture.
Red
Berry clusters. Stitch with tight French knots or padded satin dots for a glossy, festive pop.
Dark Garnet
Berry shadows and the underside of clustered knots. Add a single dark stitch at the base of each berry group.
Hazelnut Brown
Optional hoop-inspired warmth or tiny twig details where foliage meets berry clusters.
Very Light Pearl Gray
Quiet shadows inside the white snowflakes. Pair with Blanc to keep white motifs visible on pale fabric.
Stitch Plan by Design Area
- Central snowflake: outline with split stitch or whipped back stitch in 3810, then fill facets with satin stitch and long-and-short shading in 747, 3846, and Blanc.
- Raised center star: use padded satin stitch or woven picot-style small petals for a dimensional icy rosette.
- Blue snowy ring: scatter French knots, colonial knots, and tiny seed stitches in 3846, 3810, and 3809 for bubbly frost texture.
- Evergreen sprigs: work stems in back stitch, then add angled straight stitches or fishbone stitch with 3363, 3052, and 3051.
- Red berries: make clustered French knots with 2 wraps using 321; add a few 814 knots tucked low for shadow.
- Small white snowflakes: use straight stitches radiating from a center knot, finishing tips with tiny detached chain stitches.
Blending, Shading & Texture
The hoop looks most polished when the snowflake stays airy and geometric while the foliage and berry sections feel raised and organic.
Icy snowflake facets
Blend 1 strand Blanc with 1 strand 747 for the palest areas. Move to 747 + 3846 for mid-facets and finish the deepest corners with a single strand of 3810.
Crisp outlines
Use split stitch for the main snowflake edges so the line remains smooth around points. A whipped back stitch gives a slightly corded, frosty border.
Evergreen depth
Place the darkest green near the stem first, then layer medium green needles outward. Keep needle stitches angled in the same direction on each leaf section.
Berry dimension
Cluster berries in odd numbers and vary knot sizes. A tiny straight stitch in Blanc on one berry can mimic a highlight without adding bulk.
Snow dot rhythm
Scatter blue dots unevenly. Use larger knots near the wreath and smaller seed stitches toward the fabric edges for a natural snowfall fade.
White on pale fabric
If the fabric is white or very pale, outline the small white snowflakes with one strand of 762 or 747 so they do not disappear.
Beginner-Friendly Working Order
Practical finishing notes
For a neat winter hoop, keep the fabric drum-tight and use shorter thread lengths for white and pale blue floss so they stay clean. Knot-heavy sections look best when the surrounding linework is restrained.





