Elegant Rose And Daisy Swag

Elegant Rose And Daisy Swag - DMC Palette & Stitching Suggestions
Elegant Rose and Daisy Swag
DMC palette & embroidery guide

Elegant Rose And Daisy Swag

A refined floral crescent with dimensional red and blush roses, airy white daisies, deep layered greenery, and tiny gold accent sprigs. This guide translates the design into practical DMC choices, stitch direction, thread counts, blending notes, and beginner-friendly finishing tips.

Design read

The composition forms a graceful diagonal swag across the hoop, with the heaviest roses near the center and lower right. The flowers should feel lush and raised, while the leaves and gold filler remain flatter and delicate so the roses stay the focal point.

The key color story is deep garnet red, soft shell pink, crisp white, sunny daisy yellow, muted sage, dark pine green, olive-grey shadows, and antique gold seed details.

Dimensional rosesWhite daisiesSage leavesGold fillerSoft linen ground

Suggested DMC floss palette

DMC 815
Medium Garnet
Deepest rose centers, lower petal shadow, red bud bases.
DMC 816
Garnet
Main dark red rose petals and rich outlines.
DMC 321
Red
Petal highlights on red roses; use sparingly for lift.
DMC 902
Very Dark Garnet
Tiny dark turns inside rolled roses and bud tips.
DMC 224
Very Light Shell Pink
Pale rose outer petals and soft upper highlights.
DMC 223
Light Shell Pink
Middle pink rose petals and blended satin layers.
DMC 3722
Medium Shell Pink
Warm pink petal turns and shadow between rose coils.
DMC 225
Ultra Very Light Shell Pink
Creamy small rose and blush highlight touches.
DMC Blanc
White
Daisy petals; keep stitches clean and directional.
DMC 743
Medium Yellow
Daisy centers and bright knots over deeper yellow.
DMC 728
Topaz
Warm daisy center shadows and golden pollen dots.
DMC 676
Light Old Gold
Fine metallic-looking sprigs if you prefer cotton floss.
DMC 500
Very Dark Blue Green
Deep leaf undersides, central veins, shadowed stems.
DMC 3362
Dark Pine Green
Main dark leaves tucked beneath the roses.
DMC 3052
Medium Green Grey
Sage leaf bodies and softer background foliage.
DMC 3012
Medium Khaki Green
Light leaf highlights, new growth, and small fern tips.

Rose stitching plan

Work the roses with a raised, circular rhythm. Start in the center with short curved stitches or a woven wheel, then widen the arcs as the petals open.

  • Large red roses: use 3 strands for woven wheel or cast-on petals; add 1-strand backstitch curves in DMC 815/902 inside the darkest spiral.
  • Pink roses: blend 1 strand DMC 223 + 1 strand DMC 224 for soft mid petals, then switch to 3722 in the lower turns.
  • Small cream rose: use DMC 225 with tiny 224 shadows so it remains light but visible on linen.

Daisy stitching plan

Keep the daisies flatter than the roses for contrast. The white petals should radiate from the center with slight gaps so each petal stays distinct.

  • Petals: 2 strands Blanc in lazy daisy, detached chain, or narrow satin stitches, all pointing toward the yellow center.
  • Centers: cluster French knots using 2 strands DMC 728 first, then add a few DMC 743 knots on top for sparkle.
  • Edge definition: add a few tiny 1-strand straight stitches in DMC 3865 or 762 only if the white disappears on your fabric.

Element-by-element stitch guide

AreaBest stitchesThread countPractical notes
Rose headsWoven wheel, cast-on stitch, bullion knots, curved satin3 strands for raised petals; 1 strand for final shadowsKeep the center tight and darker. Let outer stitches loosen and lighten so the rose looks open.
Rose budsFishbone, padded satin, tiny fly stitch sepals2 strands for bud, 1 strand for sepalsUse garnet at the tip and dark green around the base to make the bud appear tucked into foliage.
Daisy petalsLazy daisy, detached chain, narrow satin2 strandsStitch opposite petals first to keep the round center balanced and avoid crowding.
Large leavesFishbone stitch, long-and-short, split stitch vein2 strands for fill; 1 strand for veinChange angle down the leaf. Blend dark green at the base into sage at the tip.
Fern sprigsStem stitch stems, single straight stitches for needles1 strandUse khaki green or old gold; keep these airy so they do not compete with the flowers.
Gold filler dotsFrench knots, colonial knots, seed stitch1-2 strands cotton or metallicScatter unevenly in groups of three to five. Avoid making a perfect line of dots.

Blending ideas

For a natural rose gradient, thread the needle with two related colors rather than changing colors every stitch. Useful blends: 815+816 for dark red depth, 816+321 for a brighter petal edge, 223+224 for soft pink petals, and 3052+3012 for sage leaf highlights.

Outlining details

Use one strand for any outline. A fine split stitch in DMC 500 around only the shaded side of leaves gives definition without cartoon-like borders. For flowers, outline only the tucked inner curves, not every petal.

Texture balance

Let roses be the most dimensional, daisies moderately raised, and leaves mostly flat. This hierarchy makes the swag feel elegant and prevents the small design from becoming bulky.

Shading guidance

  • Place the darkest reds near the flower centers and where petals overlap.
  • Keep pale pink and white highlights on the upper-left edges for a gentle light source.
  • For leaves, start with DMC 500 or 3362 at the base and switch to 3052 or 3012 near the tip.
  • Add gold knots after the flowers and leaves are complete, so the filler can be positioned around the finished shapes.

Beginner-friendly tips

  • Use a 6-inch hoop or keep the fabric drum-tight in a larger hoop to support dimensional rose stitches.
  • Separate all six strands first, then recombine the number needed. This makes floss smoother and reduces twisting.
  • Work from background to foreground: stems, leaves, daisies, roses, then gold knots last.
  • Test one rose on scrap fabric if woven wheels or cast-on stitches are new to you.

Recommended working order

1. Transfer only the main floral shapes and stem lines; avoid over-marking tiny filler dots. 2. Stitch stems and leaf veins with 1 strand, then fill leaves with 2 strands. 3. Complete daisies before the bulky roses so the white petals stay clean. 4. Build roses from dark centers outward, using lighter shades at the edges. 5. Finish with gold French knots and airy fern sprigs to frame the swag.

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