Floral Family Tree

Floral Family Tree - DMC Palette & Stitching Suggestions

Design #780  ·  Treehouse, Florals & Family Keepsake

Floral Family Tree

A warm woodland treehouse hoop with a dense leafy canopy, dimensional bark, a little ladder, hanging lanterns, a swing, blue window accents, and soft meadow flowers. Colors are estimated from the visible preview and matched to practical DMC embroidery floss choices.

Floral Family Tree Embroidery Hoop

Preview image from the linked pattern sample. Use the palette as a close visual guide, not an exact thread-usage chart.

Design read

The strongest visual weight is the broad tree trunk and branches in layered warm browns. The canopy is built from many small olive-green stitches that create a soft, mossy texture. The treehouse uses lighter tan siding, darker roof shadows, and clean dark outlines. Tiny yellow lanterns, blue windows, and meadow flowers add small but important bright accents.

textured leafy canopy layered bark shading rustic wood siding tiny lantern glow keepsake treehouse mood

Likely DMC Color Palette

Palette based on the tree trunk, branches, wooden house, green foliage, ladder, grass, lanterns, windows, and pale fabric background.

DMCColorNameCoverageWhere it appears / use notes
3371#1f1712Black Brown14%Deepest bark grooves, underside of branches, lantern cords, swing ropes, and crisp shadow lines under the treehouse platform.
898#492a1bCoffee Brown Very Dark13%Main dark trunk strands, branch outlines, roof under-shadows, and the most recessed roots.
801#70422aCoffee Brown Dark13%Medium bark, branch bodies, porch rail shadows, and blended transitions through the trunk.
975#9b5a31Golden Brown Dark10%Warm highlights in bark, treehouse walls, roof ridges, ladder sides, and branch tips.
3862#b88b62Mocha Beige Dark7%Lighter house planks, ladder rungs, porch floor highlights, and dry wood texture.
436#c9955dTan5%Brightest wood touches on siding edges, ladder highlights, and the tiny swing seat.
3363#4b5f32Pine Green Medium12%Dark canopy depth, leafy shadow clusters behind the house, and base greenery.
3011#6b7c42Khaki Green Dark10%Main foliage knots, grass clumps, and the outer tree crown where the green is muted and natural.
3012#8a9556Khaki Green Medium7%Leaf highlights, canopy edge sparkle, and lighter meadow texture around the roots.
3348#b6bd75Yellow Green Light4%Small bright leaf tips and fresh grass highlights; use sparingly so the canopy stays soft.
310#111111Black4%Lantern frames, hanging cords, swing ropes, window separation lines, and a few final definition stitches.
728#e4a327Topaz3%Lantern glow, tiny flower centers, and small golden meadow blossoms.
3822#f2d16bStraw Light2%Lantern highlights and the brightest dots on yellow flowers.
3761#77bdd0Sky Blue Light2%Window panes and a cool reflective accent that keeps the treehouse from feeling too brown.
712#f4edddCream1%Optional tiny glints in windows or lanterns; also useful for softening overly dark areas with a single highlight strand.

Coverage percentages are visual estimates from the preview, not exact floss consumption.

Stitching Suggestions

Tree trunk: Work long and short stitch in vertical, slightly twisting columns. Blend 3371, 898, 801, and 975 so the trunk looks rounded rather than flat.
Branches: Use stem stitch for thinner limbs and split stitch for heavier branches. Keep the stitch direction following each curve.
Leaf canopy: Use dense French knots, colonial knots, or tiny seed stitches. Vary 3363, 3011, 3012, and a few 3348 highlights to avoid a single green mass.
Treehouse siding: Fill planks with satin stitch or split stitch rows. Add fine backstitch plank lines in 801 or 898 after the fill is complete.
Roof boards: Use slanted straight stitches in 975 and 3862, then add dark 898 shadow lines between boards for the rustic roof texture.
Ladder: Stem stitch the side rails with 3862/975 and use short straight stitches for rungs. A single 898 shadow stitch on one side gives depth.
Lanterns: Outline with one strand of 310, fill the glow with 728 and 3822, then place one tiny cream stitch in the center for shine.
Swing: Use one strand of 310 for taut ropes and satin stitch the wooden seat in 975 or 436. Keep it light so it reads as delicate.

Thread-count guidance

  • Tree trunk fill: 2 strands for the main body; add 1-strand dark grooves at the end.
  • Canopy knots: 2 strands for medium knots, 1 strand for tiny edge dots and distant foliage.
  • House planks: 2 strands for fill, 1 strand for plank outlines and window bars.
  • Branches and roots: 1-2 strands depending on thickness; taper branch tips to 1 strand.
  • Lanterns, ropes, and swing: 1 strand for clean scale and less bulk.
  • Grass and flowers: 1 strand for small blades, 2 strands for yellow knots if you want raised blossoms.
Beginner-friendly order: stitch the trunk first, then the house, branches, canopy texture, ladder, swing, lanterns, and finally the tiny meadow details.

Blending & Shading Plan

For bark, thread the needle with one strand of 898 plus one strand of 801 in the shadowed center, then switch to 801 plus 975 as you move toward highlighted ridges. Reserve 3371 for the deepest vertical cracks so the trunk keeps its carved, dimensional look.

For foliage, scatter darker knots first behind the house and branches. Add medium greens across the full crown, then place lighter 3012 and 3348 only along the outer canopy and small sunlit patches. This keeps the leafy mass textured but not speckled.

Outlining Details

Use backstitch or split backstitch for the treehouse silhouette, window frames, porch rail, ladder, and lantern frames. Keep outlines thin: one strand is usually enough. On the roof and porch, add the darkest lines only where boards overlap, not around every filled stitch.

For branches crossing behind the house, outline selectively so they remain visible without competing with the treehouse.

Texture Suggestions

  • Raised leaves: French knots in uneven clusters make the canopy look plush and full.
  • Rough bark: Mix split stitch, long and short stitch, and a few couching lines for natural ridges.
  • Wood grain: Add irregular 1-strand straight stitches on the house walls and ladder rather than perfectly even stripes.
  • Grass base: Use short straight stitches that point outward from the roots, then add tiny yellow knots for flowers.
  • Lantern glow: Keep the yellow fill compact and framed by dark thread so the lanterns remain crisp at small scale.

Helpful Notes

  • Do not stitch the green canopy as a solid satin fill; the charm comes from many small dotted leaf marks.
  • Work dark-to-light on the trunk, but medium-to-light on the house so the treehouse stays warm and readable.
  • Leave small breathing spaces between leaf knots around branch tips to preserve the silhouette.
  • Use a sharp needle for tiny windows and lantern frames; crowded details become neater with shorter stitch lengths.
  • When in doubt, reduce strand count. Fine ropes, rails, and window bars look more polished when they are slim.
The finished piece will look best when the bark is directional, the canopy is softly textured, and the house details are crisp. Build the large tree structure first, then add the small family-treehouse accents like lanterns, ladder, swing, and meadow flowers as the final storytelling layer.
Floral Family Tree · DMC palette and stitching suggestions prepared from the visible design preview.

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