
Mountains in the back, pine trees in the front, and the whole thing in a single colour with layers of silhouette. The pines are the classic triangle profile that you kinda get on a national park poster, standing in a row along the base. The mountain peaks rise behind em, taller and wider, so theres a clear sense of depth even though its all one colour. Its that layered silhouette technique where the trees block part of the mountain and that overlap is what does the work.
Reach down to the 2.43-inch smallest size and youve got a 12262-stitch piece that fits neatly on a shirt pocket or a cap front. Stretch up to the 4.84-inch wide version at 8 inches tall and the stitch count hits 28050 which is solid coverage. Five sizes total. The taller portrait ratio, basically 2:1 height to width on most sizes, means this one suits jacket back panels and tote fronts better than the typical wide landscape format.
Density sits at 724 and the directional fill inside the pine triangle shapes is done with short angled stitches that follow the tree silhouette, not just a flat tatami block. set up in wilcom, fixed underlay on every layer so the layers read distinct and theres no bleed between the tree foreground and the mountain fill behind it. Thats the thing with layered silhouettes, the underlay has to be right or the whole depth illusion collapses.
Hoop with a medium cutaway on canvas or denim, tear-away on firm poplin or cotton twill. One customer doing national-park-themed camp merch last summer used the 4-inch version on dark green canvas totes and honestly it looked like it came off a letterpress. Really nice on forest green or charcoal thread on a cream or tan fabric, or flip the palette and go cream thread on a dark navy fleece. Skip white-on-white, you need contrast for those tree silhouettes to separate from the mountain layer.
Use a 75/11 or 80/12 needle, keep bobbin tension consistent and let the machine run at steady speed through the dense mountain section. Reach out if the stitch test looks muddy and Ill take a look.
Use cases coming soon.
Dimensions
5 sizes included. Stitch counts shown for the largest colorway.
| Size (in) | Stitches |
|---|---|
| 2.43 × 4.00 in | 12,262 |
| 3.03 × 4.99 in | 15,936 |
| 3.64 × 5.99 in | 19,676 |
| 4.24 × 7.01 in | 23,729 |
| 4.84 × 8.00 in | 28,050 |
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.









