
Vibrant Floral Arrangement in a Woven Basket
A polished stitching plan for a bright hoop design with warm brown woven structure, radiating branches or basket stems, rose-pink blooms, white daisies, golden sprigs, and layered green leaves on natural linen.
Design read
The preview is built around a rich dark-brown central structure that branches outward like a basket armature or stylized floral tree. The eye is drawn through curved brown lines, clusters of raised pink and red roses, crisp white daisies, pointed green leaves, and airy golden seed heads. The background fabric appears warm oatmeal, so the palette benefits from saturated greens, clean petal highlights, and strong brown outlines.
woven brown basepink rose clustersdeep red accentssage-jade leavesgolden sprigslinen background
Thread-count overview
- 2 strands for most stems, leaves, rose wraps, and daisy petals.
- 3 strands for the woven basket/trunk body where bold coverage is needed.
- 1 strand for fine outlines, petal separation lines, tiny leaf veins, and golden seed tips.
- 4 strands or pearl cotton substitute only for extra-raised rosette centers or chunky basket ridges.
Likely DMC Color Palette
Colors are estimated from the visible embroidery preview and matched to practical DMC six-strand cotton choices. Use the darker shades sparingly for definition so the bouquet remains fresh and vibrant.
| DMC | Color | Name | Practical use notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3371 | #4a2a16 | Black Brown | Deepest basket/trunk shadows, underside of branches, occasional split-stitch outlines. |
| 801 | #6b3e22 | Coffee Brown Dark | Main woven basket body and branching stems; ideal for satin and long-and-short base coverage. |
| 975 | #9b5a31 | Golden Brown Dark | Warm highlights on basket ridges, raised cords, and branch tops catching light. |
| 782 | #be802e | Topaz Dark | Golden wheat sprigs, seed heads, and small ground accents around the base. |
| 729 | #e0aa3e | Old Gold Medium | Bright tips on seed sprays and daisy centers; blend with 782 for dimension. |
| 500 | #27664f | Blue Green Very Dark | Deep leaf shadows tucked behind roses and at branch junctions. |
| 3818 | #3f8060 | Emerald Green Ultra Very Dark | Main saturated leaf tone for pointed leaves and dense foliage clusters. |
| 562 | #62a477 | Jade Medium | Leaf highlights, small new leaves, and upper edges of fishbone leaves. |
| 321 | #b41431 | Red | Bright red roses and strongest floral accents; use in spiral rosettes. |
| 815 | #7b1d2f | Garnet Medium | Deep burgundy flower shadows and the darkest folds inside red blossoms. |
| 601 | #e75485 | Cranberry | Hot pink roses, lively petal centers, butterfly-like floral pops. |
| 604 | #f09ab3 | Cranberry Light | Soft pink petal highlights and outer rose wraps. |
| 818 | #f4c9d3 | Baby Pink | Pale roses, soft petal tips, and gentle transition stitches beside white. |
| 3865 | #f7f1df | Winter White | Daisy petals, pale rose highlights, and tiny sparkle stitches on the bouquet. |
| 725 | #f1c232 | Topaz Medium Light | Clean daisy centers and bright specks among the wheat-like sprays. |
Stitching suggestions by element
| Element | Best stitches | How to work it |
|---|---|---|
| Woven basket / central structure | Long-and-short, satin stitch, split stitch | Fill with 801 in the stitch direction of each stem. Add 3371 along the lower-left edges and 975 on the upper ridges for a woven, rounded effect. |
| Basket ridges and branch lines | Whipped backstitch, stem stitch | Work the curved brown lines smoothly from the base outward. Whip selected lines with 975 so they read like raised wicker. |
| Pink and red roses | Woven wheel rose, cast-on rose, whipped spiral | Start with deeper tones near the center, then wrap outward with 604 or 818. Keep red flowers tighter and pale pink flowers looser for variety. |
| Daisies | Lazy daisy, straight stitch, French knots | Use 3865 for petals and 725 for centers. Anchor each petal neatly so the small daisies stay crisp against the green leaves. |
| Pointed leaves | Fishbone stitch, satin stitch, fly stitch | Use 3818 as the main leaf body, one side slightly darker with 500 and the tip or center vein touched with 562. |
| Golden sprigs | Straight stitch, detached chain, seed stitch | Use 782 for stems and 729 for tips. Keep stitches fine and slightly uneven to mimic dried wheat or airy filler foliage. |
| Ground accents | Lazy daisy, seed stitch | Small gold and green stitches at the base visually anchor the basket without making the lower hoop too heavy. |
Blending & shading plan
- Basket depth: use a 3371 + 801 blend for the deepest center crease, then pure 801, then a few 975 top stitches.
- Roses: blend one strand 601 with one strand 604 for mid-pink petals; switch to 818 + 3865 on pale outer petals.
- Leaves: alternate 3818 and 562 within fishbone leaves; add a single 500 stitch at the base where leaves tuck under blooms.
- Golden filler: mix 782 + 729 in the same sprig so the dried stems look sunlit instead of flat.
Outlining details
Outline only what needs separation: brown branch forks, the darkest rose centers, and a few hidden leaf bases. Avoid outlining every petal; the design looks softer and more modern when raised stitches define the blooms naturally.
Texture ideas
- Use whipped backstitch on the main brown arms for raised basket texture.
- Work roses as woven wheels so the floral clusters stand proud of the fabric.
- Add French knots only after leaves and flowers are complete to avoid snagging.
- Leave tiny linen gaps between leaf clusters to keep the bouquet airy.
Beginner-friendly order
Practical tips
- Keep fabric drum-tight so satin and fishbone stitches stay smooth.
- Use shorter thread lengths for 3371 and 815; dark floss shows fuzz quickly.
- Rotate the hoop while stitching leaves so each fishbone stitch lies naturally.
- For an easy version, simplify each rose to a woven wheel with five spokes.
- Press from the back on a towel to protect raised roses and knots.
Final finish note
This design will look best when the brown woven structure is neat and directional, while the flowers remain slightly raised and lively. Build the embroidery from the basket outward, preserve breathing room between the leaves, and use the darkest shades only for small shadows. The result should feel full, colorful, and dimensional without losing the clean hoop-art look.





