Pinecone and Evergreen Christmas Wreath

Pinecone and Evergreen Christmas Wreath — DMC Palette & Stitching Tips
Pinecone and Evergreen Christmas Wreath Embroidery
DMC Color Palette & Stitch Guide

Pinecone and Evergreen Christmas Wreath

A woodland holiday hoop with radiating evergreen boughs, raised brown pinecones, ivory star-petal accents, tiny snowy knots, and crisp winter greenery. The design works best when the pine needles are fine and directional, the pinecones are dimensional, and the white center star remains airy rather than heavy.

Evergreen needlesRaised pineconesIvory winter petalsSnowy French knots

Suggested DMC Palette

These colors are chosen to match the visible design: deep forest pine, medium spruce, muted sage tips, warm twig stems, layered pinecone browns, creamy white petals, and pale frosted highlights.

DMC 500
Blue Green - Very Dark
Darkest underside needles and shadowed inner evergreen strokes.
DMC 895
Hunter Green - Very Dark
Primary bough outlines, long central needle veins, and dense outer branches.
DMC 986
Forest Green - Very Dark
Mid-tone pine needles; blend with darker greens for full sprays.
DMC 3052
Green Gray - Medium
Soft sage tips, distant greenery, and lighter needle highlights.
DMC 3053
Green Gray
Tiny airy sprigs and pale background foliage so the wreath does not look flat.
DMC 898
Coffee Brown - Very Dark
Pinecone scale shadows and the deepest twig lines.
DMC 801
Coffee Brown - Dark
Main pinecone scale color and warm branch stems.
DMC 3864
Mocha Beige - Light
Lift the upper edge of cone scales and add golden wood highlights.
DMC 3865
Winter White
Large ivory petals, star flowers, and clean snow accents.
DMC Blanc
White
Brightest snow knots and final sparkle details over the greenery.
DMC 762
Pearl Gray - Very Light
Cool shadows beside white petals and subtle frosted outlines.
DMC 168
Pewter - Very Light
Metallic-looking icy dots, gray snow shadows, and quiet center detail.

Stitch Map by Design Area

Evergreen boughs

  • Use long-and-short straight stitches or split stitch for each needle, always angling away from the branch vein.
  • Work the central twig first in 1 strand of DMC 898 or 801, then add needles over it with 1 strand of 895, 986, and 3052.
  • Keep outer needle tips uneven and feathery; perfect symmetry can make pine look artificial.

Pinecones

  • Build cones with small stacked fishbone stitches, detached chain stitches, or padded satin scallops.
  • Place DMC 898 at the base of each scale, DMC 801 through the middle, and a tiny 3864 catch-stitch on the upper lip.
  • For extra dimension, pad the cone silhouette with 2 strands of dark brown before adding scale stitches.

Ivory petals and center star

  • Use satin stitch or fishbone stitch with 2 strands of 3865; keep stitches lengthwise so the petals radiate cleanly.
  • Add 1 strand of 762 along one side of each petal for a soft winter shadow.
  • The central snowflake can be 1 strand Blanc in straight stitches, finished with tiny French knots at intersections.

Snow, berries, and airy filler

  • Scatter French knots in Blanc, 3865, and 762; vary one-wrap and two-wrap knots for natural snow texture.
  • Use seed stitch for frosty dusting on branches without covering the green work.
  • Small star flowers look neat with lazy daisy petals and a single French knot center.

Thread Count, Blending & Shading

AreaStrandsBest approach
Fine pine needles1 strandUse crisp single-strand straight stitches for needle definition. Alternate 895 and 986, then place a few 3052 stitches only at the tips.
Branch stems1 strandSplit stitch or stem stitch in 898, with short 801 highlights on the lit side of the twig.
Pinecones2 strands, padded if desiredLayer from dark to light: 898 underneath, 801 scales, 3864 accents. Keep highlights small so cones stay rich and rounded.
White petals2 strandsSatin or fishbone stitch in 3865; add a single strand of 762 on one edge for depth and Blanc only on the brightest tips.
Snow details1–2 strandsUse one strand for delicate specks and two strands for raised knots near the wreath center.
Blending idea: For a realistic evergreen transition, thread the needle with one strand DMC 895 and one strand DMC 986 for a few mid-branch stitches, then switch to a single strand 3052 at the outermost tips. This keeps the wreath dimensional without adding too many colors.

Beginner-Friendly Stitching Order

1
Transfer lightly. Use a fine removable pen or light pencil; mark branch direction lines more clearly than every individual needle.
2
Stitch the brown framework. Work twig stems and pinecone placement first so the greenery can overlap naturally.
3
Add darkest greenery. Place DMC 500 and 895 near the center and under overlapping areas to create depth.
4
Fill with mid and pale needles. Use 986 for most needles, then sprinkle 3052 and 3053 at the outer tips and airy filler sprigs.
5
Build cones and petals. Finish pinecones with small scale highlights, then work the ivory petals so they remain clean and raised.
6
Finish with snow. Add French knots and seed stitches last so they sit on top like frost.

Texture & Finishing Tips

Keep needles sharp

Use a fresh embroidery needle and avoid dragging thick bundles through the fabric. Single-strand needles look more realistic than heavy satin fills.

Control white stitches

White floss can show shadows from darker threads underneath. Stitch dark greenery first, then float white petals and snow on top with clean hands.

Hoop and fabric

A natural linen or warm off-white cotton makes the winter whites visible. Keep the hoop drum-tight to prevent puckering around padded pinecones.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *