Embroidered Wheel of the Four Seasons

Embroidered Wheel of the Four Seasons — DMC Palette & Stitching Guide
Embroidered Wheel of the Four Seasons

DMC palette & stitching suggestions

Embroidered Wheel of the Four Seasons

A circular sampler divided into spring tulips and bees, summer roses and ladybirds, autumn leaves with a butterfly, and a frosty winter snowflake quadrant. The design works best when each season has its own color family while the cream ground, brown branch lines, and small French-knot accents keep the whole hoop unified.

Four seasonal quadrantsSatin & fishbone leavesWoven rosesFrench-knot berriesSnowflake texture

Color read of the design

The hoop is built around a soft natural fabric with four distinct moods: pastel spring, hot red summer/holiday florals, coppery autumn, and nearly white winter. Keep the strongest reds and dark outlines localized so the airy white snowflake quadrant does not feel crowded.

Spring quadrant

Peach, shell-pink and coral tulips, long green blades, beige seed heads, tiny gold knots and two striped bees.

Summer quadrant

Textured red roses, deep green leaves, a large scarlet poinsettia-style flower and glossy ladybirds with black heads.

Autumn quadrant

Brown stems, rust-orange leaves, red-pink blooms and a crimson butterfly with small pale highlights.

Winter quadrant

White, ecru and pale grey snowflakes, raised knots, bare brown twigs and crisp radial straight stitches.

Suggested DMC floss palette

Use these as practical close matches; choose one fewer shade if you prefer a simpler beginner kit, or add more adjacent values for smoother long-and-short shading.

DMC Blanc
White
Bright snowflake arms, dots and highlight stitches.
DMC Ecru
Ecru
Warm snow shadows and cream flower underlayers.
DMC 762
Pearl Grey - Very Light
Cool snowflake depth and bee wings.
DMC 754
Peach - Light
Tulip highlights and soft petal tips.
DMC 352
Coral - Light
Peach tulip centers and warm petal turns.
DMC 351
Coral
Deeper spring petals and orange-pink accents.
DMC 3716
Dusty Rose - Medium
Pink tulips and soft rose outer coils.
DMC 3712
Salmon - Medium
Pink daisy petals and butterfly warmth.
DMC 321
Red
Poinsettia flower, roses, ladybirds and berries.
DMC 666
Bright Red
Most vivid red petal centers and berry pops.
DMC 817
Coral Red - Very Dark
Red shadow lines, butterfly edges and ladybird depth.
DMC 725
Topaz - Medium Light
Bee stripes, flower centers and scattered pollen knots.
DMC 367
Pistachio Green - Dark
Long spring leaves and summer rose-leaf shadows.
DMC 368
Pistachio Green - Light
Leaf highlights and narrow blade tips.
DMC 469
Avocado Green
Dark rose leaves, veins and grounding foliage.
DMC 921
Copper
Autumn leaves and warm flower shadows.
DMC 920
Copper - Medium
Deeper orange leaves and branch-side shading.
DMC 839
Beige Brown - Dark
Branch outlines, twig structure and seed stems.
DMC 841
Beige Brown - Light
Seed heads, twig highlights and dry grasses.
DMC 310
Black
Bee bodies, ladybird heads, spots and antennae.

Stitch plan by design element

Flowers, leaves and insects

  • Tulips: satin stitch or long-and-short stitch with 2 strands. Work each petal from base to tip, mixing 754/352/351 for a rounded cup effect.
  • Roses: woven wheel or cast-on rose with 3 strands for raised spiral texture. Start dark in the center and switch to lighter pink on the outer wraps.
  • Large red poinsettia: padded satin or fishbone stitch with 3 strands; add a single central vein in 817 before filling with 321/666.
  • Leaves: fishbone stitch for broad rose leaves, straight stitch or split stitch for slender tulip blades. Use 469 at the base and 368 at the tips.
  • Bees and ladybirds: padded satin with 2–3 strands. Use 310 for heads and spots, 725 for bee stripes, and one strand of 762 or Blanc for wing glints.

Branches, snow and fine texture

  • Autumn branches: stem stitch or whipped backstitch in 839. Add 841 on the lit side so the branch does not look flat.
  • Orange leaves: detached chain, fishbone, or straight stitches in 921/920. Vary direction so the quadrant looks windblown and lively.
  • Snowflakes: straight stitch spokes with 1–2 strands of Blanc, then add small fly stitches, lazy daisy tips, and French knots in Blanc/Ecru/762.
  • Scattered dots: French knots with two wraps for pollen, berries and snow. Use 1 strand for tiny specks; use 2 strands for raised berries.
  • Divider feel: keep open fabric between seasonal groups. Resist overfilling the center so the circular wheel remains readable.

Thread-count and blending guidance

AreaRecommended strandsWhy it works
Large red flower and tulips2–3 strandsGives smooth coverage and enough lift for bold seasonal flowers without bulky edges.
Woven roses3 strands for wraps, 2 strands for spokesCreates plush round blooms while keeping the anchor spokes neat and hidden.
Fine branches and insect details1–2 strandsPreserves crisp twig angles, antennae, ladybird spots and small bee stripes.
Snowflakes1 strand for arms, 2 strands for main spokesLets winter stay delicate, lace-like and bright against the cream fabric.
French knots1–2 strands, one or two wrapsControls dot size: tiny pollen and snow with one wrap, raised berries with two wraps.
Blending idea: For tulips, thread one strand of 754 with one strand of 352. For autumn leaves, blend 921 with 920. For snow shadows, combine Blanc with 762 only in the innermost spokes so the whitework still reads clean.

Shading, outlining and texture notes

Keep each season distinct. Work one quadrant at a time and park its floss family separately: peach/pink for spring, saturated red and green for summer, copper/brown for autumn, and white/grey for winter. This prevents accidental color mixing and keeps the wheel balanced.
Outline selectively. The sample style uses enough dark detail for insects and stems, but the flowers stay soft. Outline only the branch lines, ladybird spots, bee bodies and butterfly body; leave many petals edge-free for a hand-painted look.
  • Shade petals by placing darker stitches at the base and center fold, then lighter stitches toward the outer edge.
  • Use split stitch outlines under satin-filled petals if the fabric is loosely woven; it gives a clean rim and stops floss from sinking.
  • For the butterfly, stitch the wing shape in 817 first, fill with 321/3712, then add tiny Blanc or 762 straight-stitch highlights.
  • For rose leaves, alternate 469 and 367 along the fishbone center line. Add 368 as a final single-strand highlight only on the top edge.
  • For winter, avoid heavy knots at the exact center of a snowflake until all spokes are stitched; this keeps the radial structure tidy.

Beginner-friendly workflow

1. Transfer lightly

Use a fine water-soluble pen. Mark the main stems, flower centers and snowflake spokes, but keep tiny dots optional until stitching.

2. Start with stems

Stitch branches, flower stems and leaf center lines first. They act as a map for the crowded seasonal clusters.

3. Fill broad shapes

Complete large petals and leaves before knots. This stops raised dots from catching your thread while you satin stitch.

4. Add knots last

Finish with pollen, berries, snow and insect spots. Knot size is easier to judge after the surrounding shapes are complete.

Hoop tip: use a 6–7 inch hoop, medium-weight cotton or linen, and a fresh size 7–9 embroidery needle. Keep fabric drum-tight for satin stitch and loosen the hoop between sessions to avoid ring marks.

Quick seasonal stitch recipe

Spring: Split-stitch stems in 367, satin-stitch tulips in 754/352/3716, then add 725 French knots and small padded bees.

Summer: Work red woven roses, fishbone leaves, ladybirds and the large 321/666 flower. Use 817 sparingly for shadow and drama.

Autumn: Stem-stitch brown twigs, add copper detached-chain leaves, then stitch the butterfly in red tones with tiny pale highlights.

Winter: Build snowflakes from straight stitches outward, then add French knots in Blanc, Ecru and 762 for icy dimension.

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