Blossoming Tree With Roots

Blossoming Tree With Roots - DMC Palette & Stitching Guide
DMC floss palette & hand embroidery notes

Blossoming Tree With Roots

A graceful tree-of-life style design with warm brown roots, textured bark, fresh green leaves, and soft pink blossoms. The stitching approach works best when the trunk is grounded first, then built upward into light, airy flower clusters.

Beginner friendlyBark textureSoft blossom shadingRoot detail
Blossoming Tree with Roots Embroidery

Design color read

The reference design is built around a strong central tree silhouette: dark curling roots anchor the lower half, a warm brown trunk rises into branching arms, and the canopy is softened by clustered pink blossoms with small green leaves. The palette keeps the roots slightly darker than the trunk, uses rosy petal shades in layered values, and adds enough green to stop the blossoms from looking flat.

Best overall approach: stitch the tree structure first, add bark texture second, then place blossoms from darkest to lightest so the flower canopy stays dimensional and clean.

Suggested DMC palette

DMC 310
Black
Use sparingly for the deepest root crevices, tiny branch separations, and crisp accent lines where the design needs definition.
DMC 3371
Black Brown
Best for the darkest trunk core, exposed roots, and shadowed bark ridges; work with 1 strand for fine root tips.
DMC 938
Coffee Brown Ultra Dark
A rich bark shade for the main trunk and heavier root arms; blend with 433 for natural wood variation.
DMC 433
Brown Medium
Use as the warm mid-tone on trunk curves, root tops, and branch surfaces catching light.
DMC 3863
Mocha Beige Medium
Softens bark transitions and is useful for split-stitch highlights along roots.
DMC 3857
Rosewood Dark
Adds subtle reddish warmth to the lower trunk and knot details without making the bark too orange.
DMC 223
Shell Pink Light
Lovely for shaded blossom petals and small flower bases tucked behind brighter blooms.
DMC 224
Shell Pink Very Light
Use for open petals, blossom clusters, and soft transitions around the tree canopy.
DMC 151
Dusty Rose Very Light
A highlight thread for petal tips, tiny French knots, and airy blossoms near the outer edge.
DMC 3350
Dusty Rose Ultra Dark
Use in tiny touches at blossom centers or behind overlapping petals for depth.
DMC 471
Avocado Green Very Light
Fresh leaf highlights and new growth around blossoms; ideal for small detached-chain leaves.
DMC 469
Avocado Green
Mid-green for leaf clusters and small ground sprigs; balance against pink blossoms.
DMC 936
Avocado Green Very Dark
Deep foliage shadows and the darkest leaves near branch joins.
DMC 676
Old Gold Light
Warm pollen dots, tiny glow accents in blossom centers, and optional sunlit highlights on bark.
DMC 3865
Winter White
Petal sparkle, soft negative-space accents, and small highlights where blossoms need lift.

Stitch types by design area

Trunk & main roots

Stem stitch, split stitch, long-and-short shading

Use 2 strands for the outer trunk contour and 1 strand inside narrow root lines. Follow the direction of the bark: vertical on the trunk, sweeping outward along each root.

Fine root tips

Back stitch, whipped back stitch

Use 1 strand of 3371 or 938 so the tips stay delicate. Whip only the thicker visible roots to avoid bulk.

Bark texture

Seed stitch, tiny straight stitches, couching

Add scattered 1-strand marks in 433, 3863, and 3857 after the trunk is outlined. Keep the marks irregular so the tree feels organic.

Blossom clusters

Lazy daisy, detached chain, woven wheel, French knots

Use 2 strands for petals and 1 strand for small background blossoms. Mix 224, 151, and 223 in the same cluster for a soft blooming effect.

Leaves

Fishbone stitch, satin stitch, detached chain

Use 1-2 strands depending on leaf size. Place the darkest green under blossoms and the lightest green on outer tips.

Ground accents

Seed stitch, fly stitch, small straight stitches

Keep the base airy; a few greens and gold dots can suggest moss and fallen petals without crowding the root shape.

Outlines

Back stitch, stem stitch

Outline the most important silhouette lines only: trunk edge, large roots, major branches. Leave some blossom edges unoutlined for softness.

Thread-count guidance

  • 1 strand: fine root tips, inner bark cracks, blossom centers, small leaves, and delicate branch ends.
  • 2 strands: most trunk outlines, main roots, petals, medium leaves, and visible decorative lines.
  • 3 strands: only for the thickest lower trunk or bold root base if the pattern is enlarged; otherwise it can overpower the airy flowers.
  • Needle choice: a size 7-9 embroidery needle works well for 1-2 strands on cotton or linen. Use a sharp needle if the fabric is tightly woven.

Blending, shading & texture ideas

Bark blend

Thread one strand of DMC 938 with one strand of DMC 433 for the trunk's main body. Add DMC 3863 as broken highlight stitches along one side of the trunk and upper root ridges.

Root depth

Use DMC 3371 in the under-crossing root sections and switch to 938 or 433 on top surfaces. This simple dark-to-mid shift makes the roots look layered.

Blossom clusters

Place DMC 3350 and 223 first in the densest flower areas, then add 224 and 151 on top as petal highlights. A few DMC 3865 stitches make the blossoms sparkle.

Leaf contrast

Keep DMC 936 close to the branches, DMC 469 for regular leaves, and DMC 471 for tips or new growth. This keeps the green accents lively but not overpowering.

Recommended stitching order

Transfer lightly. Mark the trunk, main roots, and largest blossom clusters clearly, but keep tiny petals and leaf placement flexible.
Outline the tree skeleton. Use stem stitch or back stitch in 3371/938 for the main trunk, large roots, and branch arms.
Fill and shade bark. Work split stitch or long-and-short rows with 938, 433, and 3863, following the natural curve of each root and branch.
Add blossoms. Start with darker rose stitches beneath, then layer lighter lazy daisies, French knots, and small straight stitches on top.
Place leaves and accents. Add small green leaves between flower clusters, then finish with gold centers and a few seed stitches around the base.
Clean the silhouette. Add final 1-strand back stitch only where the trunk or roots need sharper definition.

Beginner-friendly practical tips

  • Do not satin-stitch the whole trunk in one direction. Curved stitches make bark and roots look much more natural.
  • Keep blossom stitches loose enough to sit softly on the fabric; pulling too tightly can pinch the petals.
  • For a fuller canopy, repeat small flower stitches in uneven groups of three or five rather than perfect rows.
  • When changing from bark to blossoms, finish dark threads neatly at the back so they do not shadow through pale pink petals.
  • Use a hoop that keeps the fabric drum-tight. Root lines look cleaner when the fabric does not shift under the needle.
  • Step back often. A tree design reads best when the trunk feels balanced against the blossom mass, not when every tiny area is filled.

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