
Its a banner layout, wide and horizontal, with the tall chef hat sitting dead centre and kitchen tools arranged outward on both sides. From left to right you get a spatula, a ladle, the hat, then a whisk and a rolling pin rounding out the right side. Everything is outlines and satin fill in alot of the detail areas, not solid block fill, so the design has weight without looking heavy on a lighter fabric. And thats actually the right call for an apron or towel where you dont want bulky thread mass sitting against skin.
Single colour, which sounds like a limitation but actually makes it more versatile. Stitch it in white thread on a dark navy apron and it looks professional. Run it in black on a natural linen kitchen towel and it looks like something from a boutique kitchen shop. Five sizes from 2.74 inches wide up to 5.81 inches, stitch counts from 7,209 to 17,276. The density at 396 is workable on most woven kitchen fabric with tearaway stabiliser. Pair with a lightweight topping if your stitching on terry cloth or any fabric with a surface texture, otherwise the satin outlines sink into the loops and you cant see the spatula and whisk detail properly.
I had a customer order this one early last year specifically for chef aprons she was gifting to the kitchen team at a restaurant opening. She said she used the 5-inch version in white on black canvas aprons and ran alot of them over a weekend. The single-colour-no-stop workflow made it practical for a batch like that. Thats the kind of use case I had in mind when I kept it to one colour.
Use it on an apron chest panel for a home cook or professional chef. Add it to a chef's towel folded over an oven handle rail. Stitch it on a canvas kitchen storage bag. Pair with a name or kitchen motto text run below the banner for a personalised gift.
What people are using this design for
A starting point. The design works for plenty more than just this list, this is what folks have stitched it onto most.
- Apron chest panel for a home cook or professional chefRestaurant opening gift: a customer ran the full team's aprons back to back over one weekend using white thread on black canvas, she said the single-colour setup was what made the batch practical.
- Chef's kitchen towel folded over an oven handleKitchen towel with the 4-inch version in black thread on white, the satin outlines read clean on tight-weave cotton without needing topping.
- Canvas kitchen storage or grocery bagCanvas grocery bag front panel at 5 inches, single colour so no bulk and the design stays flexible after stitching.
- Personalised chef gift with name text added belowChef personalisation with a name or motto text run below the banner as a second pass, turns a generic product into a thoughtful gift.
- Restaurant or catering team uniform apron batch runKitchen-themed cushion in cream linen in dark thread, the banner layout suits the wide horizontal face of most cushion sizes.
- Baking-themed cushion for a kitchen or dining areaSewing or craft supply bag with the banner repurposed for a general craft-tools theme, the scissors and spatula are interchangeable visually.
Dimensions
5 sizes included. Stitch counts shown for the largest colorway.
| Size (in) | Stitches |
|---|---|
| 69.5 × 89.7 mm | 7,209 |
| 88.8 × 114.6 mm | 9,388 |
| 108.4 × 139.9 mm | 11,845 |
| 128.1 × 165.4 mm | 14,462 |
| 147.7 × 190.8 mm | 17,276 |
Files & Formats
Eight machine formats included in one zip. Whichever your machine reads, its in the pack.








Plus a color chart for thread matching. See full format guide.
Reviews
No reviews yet for this design. Be the first to share your make once you have stitched it. Tag us on Instagram and we will feature your work.
Browse by category
Pick a theme, find the perfect design for your next project
About the artist
Reyazul Masud Riham, hand-drawing every design on this site
Every design on Re Embroidery is hand-digitized by one person. Each file gets sketched, color-matched, and stitch-tested on real fabric before it earns a place in the shop. No team. No auto-conversion from images. Just slow, deliberate work, sometimes three or four days per design.
That's the joy I work for.
The hard part is finding my designs re-uploaded and resold elsewhere. So when you buy from Re Embroidery, you're paying one real person for the file you're about to download. That matters.









