
Peacock Floral Hoop Art
A richly textured peacock in a wooden hoop: cobalt-blue head and neck, creamy raised shoulder feathers, copper body shading, emerald and teal tail plumes, golden-and-blue eye spots, and soft floral branches framing the bird.
Let the neck and tail carry the saturated color, then use raised knots and soft floral stitches to echo the tactile look of the sample hoop.
Color story from the design
The reference image is dominated by luminous peacock blues and blue-greens, balanced with champagne beige wing texture, coppery body feathers, golden eye rings, soft pink-white blossoms, and olive stems. These DMC shades are practical approximations for that layered look.
Stitch plan by area
| Design element | Suggested stitches | Practical notes |
|---|---|---|
| Head and neck | split stitchlong & shortsatin stitch | Follow the curve of the neck with vertical, slightly arched stitches. Blend 823, 796, 797, and a few 995 highlights for a glossy bird-like sheen. |
| Face, beak, crest | tiny satinback stitchFrench knots | Use B5200 for face markings, 823 or 310 for the eye, 841 for the beak, and four small 796 knots for the crest tips. |
| Raised shoulder feathers | French knotscolonial knotsbullion knots | Work clustered knots in 842 and 841. Keep them irregular so the shoulder resembles the nubby texture visible in the design. |
| Copper body wing | long & shortsplit stitch | Fill with 3859, then shade under the blue wing with a darker brown if desired. Keep the stitches slanting with the body curve. |
| Tail plumes | fishbone stitchstraight stitchlong & short | Radiate from the body outward. Use 500 and 3808 first, then overlay 3846 and 699/702 highlights toward the feather centers. |
| Feather eye spots | padded satinchain stitchsplit stitch rings | Stitch the gold oval first with 783, add a 3846/796 ring, then place a dark 823 center. Keep each eye oval consistent but not identical. |
| Floral branches | stem stitchlazy daisyFrench knots | Use olive-green stems, detached-chain leaves, 3713/B5200 petals, and 743 knots for yellow flower centers. |
Thread-count guide
Blending & shading guidance
- Neck shimmer: load the needle with one strand 796 and one strand 797 for the main fill, then add isolated single-strand 995 strokes along the lit side.
- Tail depth: begin with 500 near the outside edge and under layers, feather in 3808, then brighten with 3846 where the plume catches light.
- Eye spots: use 783 as the warm base, add a thin 3846 ring, then finish with a small 823 center. A single B5200 glint can make each spot look polished.
- Shoulder texture: mix 842 and 841 randomly instead of in rows so the raised cluster feels organic.
Outlining details
- Outline the peacock silhouette with one strand of 500 or 823 only where the blue body meets the pale fabric.
- Use a fine split stitch around the neck curve before filling; it gives satin and long-and-short stitches a clean boundary.
- Keep the tail feather edges broken with short straight stitches rather than one continuous outline, matching the fringed plume look.
- Use soft green or brown for floral stems so the flowers frame the bird without competing with the tail.
Texture suggestions
This design benefits from contrast: smooth glossy blue areas beside bumpy knots and fringed tail stitches.
- Use tight long-and-short stitches on the neck for a sleek sheen.
- Add clustered French knots on the shoulder and green back.
- Use staggered straight stitches at the tail edge for feather fringe.
- Pad the golden eye spots lightly before satin stitching.
Beginner workflow
- Transfer the full bird outline, tail fan, largest eye spots, flower stems, and hoop center line first.
- Stitch from back to front: floral stems, tail base, eye spots, body, shoulder knots, neck, face, then final highlights.
- Complete all eye spots before filling the feather fringe so spacing stays balanced.
- Save knots, white glints, and crest beads for the end to keep them clean and raised.
Practical tips
- Use natural linen or pale grey fabric to flatter the blues and reduce background stitching.
- Keep tension even in the large tail fan; over-tight stitches can pucker the hoop.
- For a tidy back, avoid carrying dark blue threads behind white face or pale flower areas.
- Use a sharp needle for dense satin sections and a slightly larger needle for knot clusters.
Finishing note
The peacock should feel jewel-toned but not flat. Keep the head and neck smooth, make the shoulder visibly raised, and build the tail as many separate radiating strokes. That mix of sheen, knots, and feathered edges gives the finished hoop its ornate hand-embroidered character.
DMC suggestions are practical approximations for matching the visible design colors; adjust one shade lighter or darker to suit your fabric, lighting, and personal floss stash.





