Four Seasons Landscape

Four Seasons Landscape - DMC Palette & Stitch Guide
Four Seasons Landscape Embroidery
DMC palette & hand embroidery tips

Four Seasons Landscape

A circular hoop scene divided into spring, summer, autumn, and winter quadrants: misty mountain ridges, deep evergreen forests, blossoming shrubs, fiery trees, bare winter branches, snowbanks, winding paths, and airy skies. The palette should feel cohesive across the year while letting each season keep its own character.

Best fabricNatural linen or cotton, 6-8 inch hoop
Overall feelPainterly, scenic, layered
Skill levelConfident beginner to intermediate
Key textureTrees, mountains, snow, paths

Color story from the artwork

The reference balances cool blue skies and snowy whites with olive hills, pine forests, warm autumn leaves, pink spring blossoms, and brown tree trunks. Use a shared group of greens, browns, blues, and soft neutrals throughout the hoop, then add small seasonal accent colors so the four panels read as one finished landscape.

DMC 3811
Very Light Turquoise

Main pale sky, spring haze, and light winter blue.

DMC 3761
Light Sky Blue

Clear summer sky and cool shadow lines in snow.

DMC 3753
Ultra Very Light Antique Blue

Soft snowy highlights, cloud edges, distant mountains.

DMC 3865
Winter White

Snow caps, cloud puffs, crisp white blossoms.

DMC 3348
Light Yellow Green

Spring hills, fresh grass, sunlit meadow strokes.

DMC 3346
Hunter Green

Mid-tone forests, bushes, and summer slopes.

DMC 3362
Dark Pine Green

Deep conifers, shadowed tree lines, panel dividers.

DMC 500
Very Dark Blue Green

Strongest forest shadows and dark outlines.

DMC 936
Very Dark Avocado Green

Olive depth in grasses and shaded hills.

DMC 744
Pale Yellow

Sunlit field flecks and warm leaves.

DMC 741
Medium Tangerine

Bright autumn foliage and golden tree crowns.

DMC 921
Copper

Rust leaves, warm path accents, autumn shadows.

DMC 321
Red

Tiny berries, flower dots, and red autumn leaf sparks.

DMC 224
Very Light Shell Pink

Spring blossoms and soft floral highlights.

DMC 898
Very Dark Coffee Brown

Tree trunks, bare winter branches, strong bark lines.

DMC 433
Medium Brown

Path curves, bark highlights, earthy banks.

Season-by-season stitching plan

Work each quadrant from the farthest background toward the foreground. Keep the sky and mountain threads flatter, then add raised knots and denser stitches only for blossoms, leaf clusters, shrubs, and snow texture.

Spring mountain valley

  • Use long and short stitch in 1-2 strands for distant hills, mixing DMC 3348 with 3346 for soft green changes.
  • Make blossom clusters with tiny French knots in DMC 224, 3713, and a few 3865 highlights.
  • Add fine horizontal sky lines with one strand of 3811 or 3753 so the sky stays airy.

Summer pine mountains

  • Stitch mountain planes with satin stitch or split stitch rows, alternating 3761, 3811, 3362, and 500.
  • Use fishbone or straight stitches for pine silhouettes; keep the darkest stitches at the valley edge.
  • Clouds can be loose French knots or colonial knots in 3865 with a few 3753 shadow knots underneath.

Autumn trees and field

  • Build trunks first with 898 and 433 using stem stitch, then add branch forks with one strand for clean tapering.
  • Scatter foliage as detached chain, seed stitch, and French knots in 744, 741, 921, 321, and touches of 936.
  • Curve the path with split stitch in 433 and 612, then add one-strand grey-brown shadow stitches on the outside curve.

Winter snow path

  • Use 3865 for clean snow, then add very light blue contour lines in 3753 and 3761 to show drifts.
  • Keep bare branches crisp with back stitch in 898; switch to one strand near the tips.
  • Make the winding path with 433, 612, 168, and 3799, blending two close shades for a softened trail.

Recommended stitches & thread counts

AreaStitchesThread guidancePractical notes
SkiesLong straight stitch, split stitch, running stitch1 strand for fine lines, 2 strands for filled bandsKeep direction mostly horizontal; leave tiny fabric gaps for a light, breezy effect.
MountainsLong and short stitch, satin stitch, split stitch1 strand for distant ridges, 2 strands for closer facesChange stitch direction to follow each slope so the peaks look dimensional.
Forests and shrubsFishbone, straight stitch, seed stitch, French knots2 strands for trees, 3 strands only for raised foreground shrubsLayer light greens over darker bases instead of outlining every leaf.
Tree trunksStem stitch, split stitch, back stitch2 strands for trunks, 1 strand for small branchesUse 898 on one side and 433 on the other to create bark highlights.
Flowers, berries, leavesFrench knots, detached chain, lazy daisy, seed stitch2 strands for most knots; 1 strand for tiny background dotsGroup knots irregularly, not in rows, for a natural landscape feel.
Snow and pathSplit stitch, couching, running stitch, whipped back stitch1 strand for shadows, 2 strands for path edgesBlue-grey contour lines make the white snow visible without overfilling it.

Blending ideas

For smooth mountain and meadow transitions, thread the needle with one strand of each neighboring color: 3348 + 3346 for spring slopes, 3362 + 500 for pine shadows, 741 + 921 for autumn leaves, and 3753 + 3865 for snow. Blended two-strand stitches are especially useful where one quadrant needs to fade into another.

Outlining details

Use the quadrant divider lines sparingly but confidently: split stitch in DMC 500 or 3362 works well for the center cross. Outline major tree trunks and the foreground path with 898, but avoid heavy black outlines; the design is more painterly when edges are defined by adjacent color changes.

Texture suggestions

Reserve raised texture for seasonal features: spring flowers, summer clouds, autumn leaves, and winter snow dots. Too much raised stitching across the whole hoop can flatten the landscape, so keep backgrounds smooth and foregrounds tactile.

Beginner-friendly workflow

Trace the full design lightly, then stitch one quadrant at a time while repeating core colors around the hoop for unity. Start with sky and mountains, add trees and paths, then finish with knots, blossoms, berries, and snow highlights.

Use shorter thread lengthsTest knots on scrap fabricKeep tension relaxedStep back oftenPhotograph between layers
  • Use a sharp needle for woven cotton and a crewel needle for heavier knot areas.
  • Separate floss strands before recombining them; this makes blended colors lie flatter.
  • When filling mountains, stagger stitch lengths so seams do not form hard stripes.
  • For neat hoop presentation, keep the back tidy near the center cross so dark carries do not shadow through pale sky or snow.
  • Finish with the smallest highlights last: cloud knots, blossom centers, red berries, and bright snow catches.

Four Seasons Landscape embroidery palette prepared as a practical DMC floss and stitch-planning guide.

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