Blooming Floral Tree Hoop
A cheerful botanical hand embroidery design featuring a sturdy brown tree, layered green leaves, golden wheat-like sprigs, and raised roses and daisies in pink, red, white, and blush tones.
Preview

This guide is based on the visible embroidery preview: a tree-shaped floral arrangement worked on neutral fabric inside a hoop. The design is built around a dark brown trunk and branching structure, with clusters of green leaves, golden wheat-like sprigs, dimensional spiral roses, small pink blossoms, and a few white daisy-style flowers.
Likely DMC Color Palette
The coverage percentages are visual estimates from the preview image, intended to help plan floss colors. They are not exact thread usage, stitch counts, or a substitute for a pattern’s official materials list.
| DMC | Approx. Hex | Thread Name | Est. Coverage | Where It Appears |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 938 | #4D2418 | Ultra Dark Coffee Brown | 26% | Main tree trunk, heavy lower base, branch outlines, and the deepest shadows in the woody structure. |
| 500 | #2F7A55 | Very Dark Blue Green | 18% | Darker leaf clusters throughout the crown, especially along branch tips and behind the flowers. |
| 563 | #4E9B72 | Light Jade | 13% | Mid-green leaf fills and lighter leaf strokes that give the foliage a fresh, layered look. |
| 3828 | #D6A24A | Hazelnut Brown | 11% | Golden wheat sprigs, small seed heads, ground leaves near the base, and warm botanical accents. |
| 335 | #D63F6F | Rose | 9% | Bright pink spiral roses and stronger pink blossoms across the upper left, center, and lower right areas. |
| 151 | #F3A3B5 | Very Light Dusty Rose | 8% | Pale pink roses, soft petal highlights, and blush floral clusters on both sides of the tree. |
| 321 | #B71E28 | Red | 6% | Red roses and saturated flower centers, including the vivid blooms on the upper left and mid-right branches. |
| 814 | #8C1E2E | Dark Garnet | 4% | Deep burgundy flower on the right side and shadow stitches inside the darkest red floral details. |
| B5200 | #F7F2ED | Snow White | 3% | White daisy petals, pale flower highlights, and the lightest raised rose near the top center. |
| 726 | #F2C94C | Light Topaz | 2% | Yellow daisy centers and tiny bright accents within the white blossoms and golden sprigs. |
Stitching Suggestions
Tree trunk and branches
Use long-and-short stitch or closely packed split stitch to fill the trunk, following the vertical grain. Work branches with stem stitch or split stitch, tapering the line as it reaches the flower clusters.
Layered green leaves
Fishbone stitch is a strong match for the visible leaf shapes. Alternate dark and mid green leaves so the foliage looks full without losing the individual leaf edges.
Raised roses
For the spiral roses, use woven wheel stitch, whipped spider wheel, or tightly curled stem-stitch spirals. Keep the outer wraps relaxed so the blossoms remain rounded and dimensional.
Small pink blossoms
Use lazy daisy petals or short satin stitches radiating from a center point. A tiny French knot in the middle will help separate these simple flowers from the larger roses.
Daisies and light flowers
White daisies can be stitched with detached chain petals or small satin stitches, then finished with a yellow French knot or colonial knot for the center.
Golden wheat sprigs
Use a fine stem stitch for the main sprig line and single straight stitches for the grains. Keep these strokes airy so they frame the tree rather than competing with the heavier roses.
Where to Start
- Begin with the trunk and main branch lines, since they define the shape and spacing of the whole floral tree.
- Add the larger green leaves next, working from the inner branches outward so the foliage sits naturally behind the flowers.
- Stitch the raised roses after the leaves; place the lightest and brightest blooms carefully so they become the focal points.
- Fill in the smaller pink blossoms, white daisies, and yellow centers once the large flowers are secure.
- Finish with the golden wheat sprigs, tiny base leaves, and any final shadow stitches on the trunk and branches.
Helpful Notes
- The design depends on contrast between the dark trunk, green leaves, and bright flowers. Keep the woody stitches dense and the surrounding botanical accents lighter.
- Dimensional roses can use more thread than flat stitches, so keep extra pink, red, and blush floss available even though the visible coverage looks modest.
- Use two strands for most leaves and branches, then reduce to one strand for the finest wheat sprigs and tiny outline corrections.
- When stitching leaf clusters, angle each fishbone stitch toward the leaf tip to preserve the tidy, feathered texture seen in the preview.
- If substituting colors, maintain a mix of dark green, mid green, warm gold, pale pink, bright rose, and deep red so the design keeps its lively garden-tree character.
All palette choices and coverage percentages are approximate visual estimates from the preview. Actual floss needs may vary with fabric size, strand count, stitch density, and personal stitching style.
Encouraging Finish
This design is a lovely balance of structure and softness: the tree trunk gives you a steady anchor, while the roses, daisies, leaves, and golden sprigs let the hoop bloom with texture. Stitch it in layers, enjoy the raised floral details, and let each branch become its own little bouquet.





