A Dozen Delicate Butterflies

A Dozen Delicate Butterflies — DMC Palette & Stitching Guide
A Dozen Delicate Butterflies

DMC color palette · stitch planning · finishing notes

A Dozen Delicate Butterflies

A soft hoop-art guide inspired by the reference design: twelve airy butterflies arranged as an open wreath, with pastel pink, lavender, blue, cream, peach, and plum wings floating around tiny white blossoms and dotted flight trails.

Best for 6–8 inch hoops Pastel butterfly wreath Satin, long-and-short & split stitch Tiny knots and dotted trails

Design Read: What to Capture

Visual mood

The composition is light, circular, and romantic. Butterflies sit at varied angles around the hoop, leaving a calm open center. The palette is mostly powdered pinks, mauves, lavender, pale blue, warm cream, and one deep plum butterfly for contrast.

Embroidery priorities

Keep wings soft but defined. Use directional stitches radiating from each body toward the wing edge, then add darker veins and tiny body marks. The small white flowers and dotted trails should feel delicate, not heavy.

Working order: stitch the pale flower clusters and flight trails first, then butterfly wing fills from light to dark, add bodies and antennae, and finish with crisp vein lines plus a few single-strand highlights.

Suggested DMC Palette

These colors are chosen to match the visible pastel butterfly wings, linen background, cream blossoms, brown dotted trails, dark bodies, and the dramatic plum-and-white butterfly on the lower left.

Soft pink wings
DMC 818 · Baby Pink
Light pink butterfly base, pale petal blush, feathered wing tips.
Rose shading
DMC 776 · Medium Pink
Rose butterflies, wing bases, underside shading on pink wings.
Deep rose
DMC 3688 · Mauve Medium
Darker pink wing veins, tiny wing spots, shadowed lower petals.
Pale lavender
DMC 211 · Lavender Light
Lavender butterfly fills, soft transition rows, highlight petals.
Violet midtone
DMC 210 · Lavender Medium
Purple wing shading, vein accents, alternating butterfly segments.
Violet depth
DMC 209 · Lavender Dark
Purple butterfly centers, darker outer edges, folded wing shadows.
Plum butterfly
DMC 550 · Violet Very Dark
Lower-left butterfly outline, dark scalloped edges, bold body accents.
Sky blue wings
DMC 3841 · Baby Blue Pale
Blue butterfly fill, cool highlights, soft wing interiors.
Blue shadow
DMC 3760 · Wedgewood Medium
Blue wing veins, shaded folds, outer edges.
Butter cream
DMC 745 · Yellow Pale Light
Cream butterflies, warm wing highlights, flower centers.
Peach coral
DMC 353 · Peach
Peach butterflies, warm lower wings, blush on small flowers.
Flower white
DMC B5200 · Snow White
Tiny flower petals, plum-wing inner marks, sparkle stitches.
Soft linen light
DMC 3865 · Winter White
Subtle petal shadows, softened white details, pale wing glints.
Dotted trails
DMC 841 · Beige Brown Light
Flight dots, flower stems, soft trail curves around the wreath.
Bodies & antennae
DMC 3371 · Black Brown
Butterfly bodies, antennae, V-shaped accents, tiny dark spots.

Motif-by-Motif Stitch Map

AreaSuggested stitchesThread countNotes
Pastel butterfly wingsLong-and-short stitch or directional satin stitch1–2 strandsAngle stitches from the body outward. Keep each wing half stitched in a fan direction so the butterflies look airy rather than block-filled.
Wing veinsSplit stitch, backstitch, or very fine stem stitch1 strandUse a darker shade from the same family. Let veins taper by shortening the final stitches near the wing edge.
Plum-and-white butterflyBackstitch outline, satin fill, small straight stitches1 strand for white marks, 2 strands for plum outlineStitch the deep plum outline first, fill the pale inner marks last, and leave small linen gaps if the shape gets crowded.
Butterfly bodiesSatin stitch or wrapped backstitch1–2 strandsA tiny tapered satin body gives a raised center. Use one strand for antennae so the V shapes stay elegant.
White flowersLazy daisy petals with French knot centers1 strand petals, 1–2 wraps for knotsUse B5200 for petals and 745 or 841 for centers. Keep petals small and irregular for a hand-stitched meadow feel.
Dotted flight trailsSeed stitch, tiny straight stitch, or colonial knots1 strandAlternate dot size and spacing. Do not make a continuous line; the charm comes from a broken, floating path.
Outer wreath balanceMinimal couching or scattered detached stitches1 strandUse only where needed to connect clusters visually. Avoid adding heavy vines that would compete with the butterflies.

Blending & Shading Ideas

Pink butterflies

Blend 818 + 776 in the needle for a soft rose wing. Add a few single-strand 3688 stitches at the wing base and along lower edges.

Lavender butterflies

Use 211 for the outer wing, 210 through the middle, and 209 nearest the body. Feather the shades with alternating stitch lengths.

Blue butterflies

Lay 3841 as the main fill, then place short 3760 vein stitches over the top. A few 3865 highlights make the wings look luminous.

Cream butterflies

Shade 745 with a touch of 841 near the body. Keep the outer tips pale so they remain visible against linen without looking yellow-heavy.

Peach butterflies

Work 353 as a warm base and mix with 818 for softer upper wings. Add one or two 776 stitches at the body for dimension.

Deep plum contrast

The dark butterfly anchors the wreath. Use 550 sparingly but confidently, then brighten it with B5200 straight stitches inside each wing cell.

Blending tip: for tiny butterflies, blend only two strands at a time. A 1+1 blend gives color movement without thickening the wing shape too much.

Outlining & Fine Details

Butterfly outlines

Use one strand for most outlines. Backstitch the body-side edges and the upper wing veins, but leave some pastel outer edges unoutlined to keep the design soft. The darker plum butterfly can take a stronger two-strand border.

Antennae and wing spots

Use DMC 3371 with one strand. Make antennae as two tiny straight stitches or a narrow V. For spots, use single seed stitches or one-wrap French knots rather than large knots.

Flight trails

Mark the curve lightly with removable pencil, then stitch staggered dots in 841. Vary the direction of the tiny stitches so the path looks hand-drawn and fluttery.

Flower clusters

Scatter the white blossoms between butterflies to guide the eye around the wreath. Use five lazy-daisy petals and a small knot center, or simplify to three petals where space is tight.

Practical Embroidery Tips

  1. Use a firm neutral fabric. The pale wings need contrast, so natural linen or cotton-linen in oatmeal, warm grey, or flax is ideal.
  2. Keep the hoop tension even. Long satin stitches on butterfly wings can pucker if the fabric relaxes while stitching.
  3. Shorten satin stitches on larger wings. Split big wing areas into narrow fan sections so the floss lies smoothly and does not snag.
  4. Stitch mirrored wings separately. Complete one wing half, then rotate the hoop and match the stitch angle on the opposite side.
  5. Do the darkest details last. Brown bodies and antennae are tiny but visually strong; adding them last prevents smudgy-looking corrections.
  6. Press from the back. Place the finished work face-down on a towel and steam gently from the reverse to preserve raised knots and wing texture.

Quick Starter Plan

For a softer beginner version

Use two strands for all wing fills, one strand for outlines, and skip complex shading. Choose one pink, one lavender, one blue, one cream, one peach, white, trail brown, and body brown.

For a more dimensional version

Use long-and-short shading on each butterfly, add single-strand vein overlays, couch a few wing edges with matching thread, and place tiny B5200 highlights where wings catch the light.

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