
Blooming Basket Garden
A cheerful garden-basket embroidery with woven warm browns, abundant leafy greenery, and mixed spring-to-summer blossoms. The palette is designed to keep the basket grounded while letting pink, yellow, lavender, and blue flower details feel fresh and dimensional.
Polished DMC Color Palette
These DMC colors are chosen for a blooming basket garden: straw and bark browns for the woven base, several greens for stems and leaves, and lively floral shades for blossoms, buds, and tiny accent petals.
Stitch Types by Design Area
Basket body & handle
Use satin stitch or straight stitch in alternating directions to mimic woven strips. Outline the rim and handle with split stitch, then add short DMC 3826 highlight strokes over the main brown.
Stems & greenery
Work curved stems in stem stitch using 2 strands. Add leaves with lazy daisy, fishbone stitch, or small angled straight stitches, mixing dark and light greens for depth.
Large blossoms
Use satin stitch or long-and-short stitch for petals. Keep the stitch direction radiating from the center so each flower appears rounded instead of flat.
Small filler flowers
Use detached chain petals, French knots, and tiny straight stitches. Repeat the same simple shapes in different colors to make the bouquet feel full.
Flower centers
French knots in DMC 742 or 744 create raised pollen. For bigger centers, cluster three to five knots rather than making one bulky knot.
Thread Count & Handling
Fine stem veins, tiny bud stems, basket highlights, petal separation lines, and delicate final outlines.
Most petals, leaves, stems, basket outlines, French knots, and decorative filler stitches.
Basket rim, bold handle sections, foreground leaves, and larger flowers that need extra visual weight.
Blending, Outlining & Shading Guidance
Texture Suggestions
Beginner-Friendly Practical Tips
Use a simple order
Basket first, stems second, leaves third, flowers fourth, and tiny knots last. This prevents snagging raised details while you work.
Keep tension relaxed
Flower petals look best when the thread lies smooth on the fabric. Pull just until the stitch rests flat; do not tighten until the fabric puckers.
Group thread changes
Stitch all dark green shadows, then all mid-green leaves, then the highlights. This saves time and keeps the color distribution balanced.
Protect the back
End threads before jumping across the basket opening or between flower clusters. Shorter carries help the finished hoop stay smooth.
Suggested Stitching Sequence
For the cleanest result, build from the basket structure upward and save raised floral details for the end.





