
DMC palette & hand embroidery guide
Festive Candle Floral Stitch Art
A warm holiday-inspired candle design with a glowing flame, creamy wax body, evergreen leaves, red berries, and layered floral accents. The strongest visual story is the contrast between soft candlelight, deep winter greenery, and cheerful crimson-pink blossoms arranged around the base.
Color story from the reference image
Candlelight center
The candle is the calm focal point: ivory wax, soft beige shadow, a golden flame, and a warmer orange core. Keep the candle smoother than the greenery so it reads as glowing and clean.
Festive red florals
Crimson berries and red-to-pink flower petals create the brightest accents around the candle base. Use several reds so berries, petals, and shaded undersides do not merge into one flat color.
Evergreen wreath base
Deep pine, hunter green, sage, and olive leaves frame the candle. Brown stems and tiny gold details add structure, while pale cream highlights soften the overall holiday palette.
Recommended DMC floss palette
These DMC colors are chosen for a festive candle arrangement: creamy wax, golden flame, crimson berries, rosy florals, evergreen foliage, woody stems, and delicate highlight details. Use the darkest shades sparingly for final definition.
Stitch plan by design area
Thread-count, blending, and shading guidance
| Area | Strands | Best approach |
|---|---|---|
| Candle outline and wax shading | 1-2 strands | Use 2 strands for a soft filled wax body and 1 strand for the candle edge, rim, and subtle beige shadow lines. |
| Flame | 1 strand | Use very short satin stitches so the flame stays small and bright. Avoid heavy outlining around the flame. |
| Wick and tiny details | 1 strand | Use 898 for the wick, twig tips, and any dark separators. One strand prevents the center from becoming bulky. |
| Petals | 1-2 strands | Use 2 strands for bold foreground petals; switch to 1 strand for petal veins, folded edges, and color transitions. |
| Evergreen needles | 1 strand | Layer fine straight stitches in different greens. A single strand keeps each needle distinct and elegant. |
| Berries and flower centers | 2 strands | Use two-wrap knots for raised berries; use smaller single-wrap knots for gold flower centers and sparkle dots. |
Outlining and texture suggestions
Soft candle definition
- Outline the candle with broken split stitch in 712 or 739 rather than dark brown.
- Use the darkest brown only for the wick and small grounding shadows under the floral cluster.
- Leave a narrow vertical highlight in 3865 so the wax looks smooth and luminous.
Festive flower depth
- Place 815 closest to petal bases, 321 through the middle, and 666 or 760 on petal tips.
- Add petal veins after the fill is complete with one strand and a sharp needle.
- Use a few padded satin stitches only on the largest foreground petals for gentle dimension.
Greenery texture
- Stitch stems first, then leaves, then evergreen needles so overlaps look natural.
- Alternate needle length around each sprig; perfectly even stitches can look stiff.
- Keep 3013 for upper leaf edges and small background leaves to create atmospheric depth.
Raised berries and sparkle
- Use colonial knots for sturdier berries if the hoop will be handled often.
- Place one small highlight stitch on the same side of each berry to imply candlelight.
- Add tiny 3821 knots near flower centers and greenery tips for a polished festive finish.
Beginner-friendly practical tips
Build the glow first
Stitch the candle and flame before adding dark greenery. This helps you judge how much contrast the surrounding foliage needs.
Control bulk
Use knots only for berries and centers, not for every small dot. Too many raised stitches can crowd the candle base.
Keep the palette balanced
Repeat a small amount of red, gold, and light green on both sides of the candle so the arrangement feels centered and festive.
Designed as a polished DMC palette and stitching companion for the Festive Candle Floral Stitch Art embroidery pattern.





