A sunflower frame built for split monogram work, the bloom cut across the middle by a horizontal satin bar with the letter gap sitting right there in the centre. You run this design first, then hoop again and stitch your monogram letter into that gap. Its a two-run process but most people doing personalised work already know how that goes. The frame stitches out in one go, no colour stops, dark green thread straight through.
18,446 stitches at the 7.19-inch size, so the largest version is genuinely dense. Use cutaway stabiliser, medium weight, hooped firm. The satin petal fills are heavy and the horizontal bar is a solid satin rectangle that will pull lighter backing out of shape. Ive seen what happens when customers try this on fleece with tearaway: the bar buckles. Dont do that. The petal fills have directional angles so stitch a test piece to check your tension before you run the real item, if the tension is off the sheen variation between petals disappears and the whole thing looks flat.
A customer who runs a personalised gifts business told me last month this is her most-requested flower frame, because people who dont want a traditional scroll or vine frame go straight for the sunflower shape. Stitch it on towels, tote bags, cushion covers, shirts, or blanket corners. Add your letter separately in the gap. The 3.36-inch version is surprisingly detailed at that scale, good for a shirt pocket or a smaller item. Message me if anything looks off.
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.
- Personalised monogram towel with initial stitched into the frame gapRun the frame first then re-hoop with the letter file centred in the bar gap for a clean result; the registration is easier than it sounds.
- Tote bag with a custom initial in the sunflower centreCanvas tote takes the heavy satin petal fills well with a firm cutaway backing; the sunflower halves read as a deliberate design choice.
- Blanket corner with a name initial for a personalised giftA blanket corner at the 3.36-inch size keeps the frame small and elegant rather than dominating; I usually put it at a folded corner for gifting.
- Shirt left chest with a small initial added in the split gapLeft chest on a shirt works best at the smallest size to keep the weight manageable on lighter fabric; dark green on white is the sharpest combo.
- Cushion cover monogram as a wedding or housewarming giftDark green thread on white or cream fabric makes this look like a printed monogram from a distance; up close the satin texture gives it away.
Dimensions
5 sizes included. Stitch counts shown for the largest colorway.
| Size (in) | Stitches |
|---|---|
| 3.36 × 3.50 in | 7,723 |
| 4.32 × 4.50 in | 10,156 |
| 5.28 × 5.50 in | 12,747 |
| 6.23 × 6.50 in | 15,507 |
| 7.19 × 7.50 in | 18,446 |
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.
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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.










