
Heres the lightest and most delicate design in this whole green wildflower range. Stitch count tops out at only 5,898 stitches at the largest size, which means its incredibly fast to run and works on fabrics that heavier designs would distort. Im talking fine cotton voile, silk organza, thin linen, even paper-backed stabiliser for craft projects.
The bouquet itself is small and spare: a couple of cosmos-type daisy outlines at the top, a spray of round berry-like dots on the left, a few oval leaf shapes, and one tiny 5-petal flower near the tied base. Its all outline work with barely any fill at all, density 196, only 17 to 20 trims across all sizes. You could run this on a domestic machine without any drama. Hoop with standard tearaway on most fabrics, or topping on velvet if thats your project.
5 sizes from 3.5 inches wide and under 2 inches tall up to 7.5 inches across with 4 inch height. The wide and flat shape means it sits well horizontally on napkin corners, card fronts, sleeve hems, or the edge of a pillowcase.
A customer picked this one last spring to stitch along the collar edge of a white cotton blouse, the tiny berry sprigs and outline daisies looked exactly like a hand-embroidered heirloom piece. Thats the vibe: old-fashioned botanical, nothing loud. Best thread choice is a thread with a lil sheen in sage or hunter green on white or cream fabric.
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.
- White cotton blouse collar or cuff edgeRun the small size along a blouse collar, centring the bouquet at the centre-back neck point.
- Napkin corners for table settingsStitch in the corner of linen napkins with tearaway stabiliser, the open outlines wont stiffen the napkin.
- Pillowcase hem bordersThe 5-inch wide version fits along a standard pillowcase hem with a few inches of space either side.
- Fine fabric sachets and lavender bagsUse the 3.5-inch file on a small muslin sachet filled with dried lavender, looks hand-embroidered.
- Pocket handkerchiefsThe smallest size centred on a handkerchief with hairline-weight thread looks antique and fine.
- Linen journal or notebook coversStitch on the fabric cover of a linen-bound journal, centred near the bottom third.
- Sheer or voile curtain accentsThe open airy stitching wont weigh down sheer fabric, great for a delicate curtain corner accent.
Dimensions
5 sizes included. Stitch counts shown for the largest colorway.
| Size (in) | Stitches |
|---|---|
| 88.8 × 47.7 mm | 2,964 |
| 114.2 × 61.3 mm | 3,664 |
| 139.7 × 74.9 mm | 4,423 |
| 165.0 × 88.6 mm | 5,172 |
| 190.4 × 102.2 mm | 5,898 |
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.









