Golden Mountain Sunset

Golden Mountain Sunset - DMC Palette & Stitching Tips

Golden Mountain Sunset

Design #399  ·  Landscape Hoop Art, Mountain View & Sunset Embroidery Pattern

This guide is based on the visible hoop preview: a warm half-sun setting behind layered blue-green mountains, long golden rays across the sky, a pale fabric background, dark evergreen trees in the foreground, small flowers at both sides, and a narrow stitched path or stream leading into the landscape.

Color coverage percentages are visual estimates only. They are judged from the preview image and should not be treated as exact floss usage, stitch counts, or yardage requirements.

Preview

Embroidered Sunset Landscape Hoop

Preview image from linked source file.

The design shows a round hoop with a scenic stitched landscape. The most visible features are the golden sunset and radiating sky lines, overlapping teal mountain ranges, deep green foreground trees, a cool blue-green path or waterway, and clusters of small warm and pale flowers near the lower edges.

Likely DMC Color Palette

The DMC choices below are close visual matches for the preview. The palette leans toward golden sunset shades, blue-teal mountain tones, cool aqua highlights, and deep evergreen foreground accents.

DMC Approx. Hex Thread Name Coverage Where It Appears
3852 #CD9A23 Straw Very Dark 14% Sun outline, lower edge of the sun, stronger golden bands, and some of the brighter sunset rays.
743 #FED376 Yellow Medium 10% Soft golden fill inside the sun and the lighter yellow rays extending outward across the upper sky.
3822 #F6DC9A Straw Light 5% Pale ray highlights, subtle sky lines, and light warm accents where the sun rays fade into the fabric.
977 #DC9C56 Golden Brown Light 6% Peachy-orange rays and warmer shading around the horizon and sunburst lines.
3809 #3F8F8D Turquoise Very Dark 15% Main middle mountain slopes, blue-green ridgelines, and darker sections of the layered hills.
3768 #5FA7A5 Grey Green Dark 12% Cool teal mountain faces, shaded valley shapes, and some of the stitched ground planes.
3810 #7BC8C3 Turquoise Dark 13% Bright aqua slopes in the right foreground, pale mountain highlights, and lighter hillside bands.
3811 #BCE3DF Turquoise Very Light 7% The lightest snowy or misty mountain highlight down the central peak and soft aqua foreground areas.
500 #044D3F Blue Green Very Dark 10% Deep evergreen trees, darkest foreground shrubs, and the shadowed path or stream at the bottom center.
502 #5B907B Blue Green 5% Muted green hillside lines, small valley bands, and middle-value foliage between the trees and mountains.
3345 #1B591F Hunter Green Dark 5% Ferny evergreen stitches and dark leafy details in the lower left and lower right foreground.
720 #E56B2A Orange Spice Dark 3% Warm flower dots and small orange blossoms in the lower left foreground.
746 #F6EEE0 Off White 3% Pale flower centers, tiny light blossoms at the right side, and small highlights in the floral clusters.
725 #FFC840 Topaz Medium Light 2% Small yellow blossoms near the lower right and warm accent dots among the greenery.

Stitching Suggestions

Design Element Recommended Stitches Practical Notes
Setting sun Satin stitch, long-and-short stitch, split stitch outline Work the curved sun outline first, then fill with smooth horizontal or slightly fan-shaped stitches. Keep the edge neat so it stays distinct from the mountains.
Sun rays Straight stitch, whipped back stitch, couching for long rays Use single clean strands or two strands for graceful lines. Stitch from the sun outward so the rays feel evenly spaced and radiating.
Mountain ridges Long-and-short stitch, satin stitch, stem stitch along ridge edges Follow the slope direction of each mountain face. Changing stitch angle is what gives the layered mountains their folded, dimensional look.
Light central peak Long satin stitch, split stitch, directional fill Keep the pale blue-green highlight smooth and narrow. Work beside the darker mountain sections rather than over them to preserve crisp ridgelines.
Foreground hills and path Stem stitch, split stitch, satin stitch, short straight stitches Use horizontal and gently curved strokes to suggest ground contours. Darker thread at the bottom helps anchor the whole hoop.
Evergreen trees Fishbone stitch, fly stitch, straight stitch, detached chain Start with the trunk or center line, then build branches outward. Mix dark and mid greens for more natural depth.
Small flowers French knots, colonial knots, tiny lazy daisies Save flower knots until after the foliage is complete. This keeps the blossoms sitting brightly on top of the greenery.

Where to Start

Begin with the large structural shapes: the mountain outlines, the sun curve, and the main foreground boundary. Once those landmarks are in place, fill the sky rays and the sun, then move into the mountain layers from back to front.

  • Stitch the sun and rays early so the skyline stays clean and centered.
  • Work the mountains in layers, starting with the farthest, lighter slopes and finishing with the darker foreground shapes.
  • Leave the flowers and tiny highlights for last so they remain crisp and raised on the surface.

Helpful Notes

  • Use the direction of each stitch to describe the landscape: rays should radiate, mountains should slope, and water or pathways should move horizontally or gently downward.
  • For a softer scenic effect, blend nearby teal shades by alternating strands in adjacent rows rather than making hard color blocks.
  • Long sky rays can loosen if they are too stretched. Keep tension even, or couch very long lines with a tiny matching stitch if needed.
  • The pale fabric is part of the visible composition, so not every background area needs to be filled.
  • Coverage percentages in the palette are visual estimates from the preview, not exact thread usage or a substitute for the original pattern instructions.

Encouraging Finish

This design has a lovely balance of bold shapes and small details: the sun and mountains give it structure, while the flowers and evergreen textures add charm. Take the landscape one layer at a time, keep your stitch direction intentional, and let the warm golds and cool blue-greens build the peaceful sunset mood.

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