
This one is the full mount portrait, antlers, face, muzzle, the flowing fur around the neck, all of it. Nothing is left out. Theres real detail in the mane area especially, those long flowing stitch lines that give the fur some movement rather than just a flat block fill. The antlers spread wide and have that irregular branching you'd see on an actual mature stag, not a cartoon version. A customer last autumn sent me a photo of this stitched onto an olive jacket back panel at 8 inches and it was genuinely impressive.
All in orange, single colour, zero colour changes. At the smallest size you get 12,094 stitches, thats a lot of detail packed in tight. Scale to 8 inches and its 26,948, which is when all that fur and rack detail really opens up properly. Five sizes in total.
Pop tearaway behind on woven fabric like cotton twill or linen. Hoop polymesh on fleece or knit and it'll hold the face detail without distortion. Make sure your stabiliser is seated flat before those muzzle sections, thats where the thread density peaks. Use a sharp needle, size 75/11 works well for the finer detail passes.
Its gone to cabin pillows, hunting jackets, outdoor gear bags, framed hoop art. Dm me if youve got a specific project and want to talk through sizing before you buy.
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.
- Hunting jacket back panel or chest at 6-8 inch, full portrait impactAt 8 inches on a jacket back panel this is a proper statement piece -- the fur detail and antler spread look intentional and finished.
- Lodge or cabin throw pillow centrepiece designA cream or natural linen pillow with orange stag centre is exactly the kind of thing lodges and cabin stays put in their rooms.
- Framed hoop art for a rustic home office or study wallStretched in an 8-inch wooden hoop with dark backing fabric, this needs no extra embellishment to work as wall art.
- Personalised duffel bag or gear bag for outdoor enthusiastsHeavy canvas duffel takes the 6-inch well with cutaway underneath; the portrait placement on the end panel looks great.
- Cap front panel at 4-inch for a hunter or outdoorsmanFour inches on a structured cap panel keeps the face readable -- the muzzle and eye area still have enough detail at that scale.
- Camo vest chest placement, orange on olive or dark green fabricOrange on olive drab or dark green camo is a classic hunting aesthetic and the satin fill makes the orange really punch.
- Nursery woodland theme wall hoop for a boy's roomSoft orange on a nursery sage or cream wall hoop reads as woodland animal, not hunting -- its a gentle portrait at smaller sizes.
Dimensions
5 sizes included. Stitch counts shown for the largest colorway.
| Size (in) | Stitches |
|---|---|
| 4.01 × 4.00 in | 12,094 |
| 5.01 × 5.00 in | 15,492 |
| 6.01 × 6.00 in | 19,065 |
| 7.01 × 6.99 in | 22,861 |
| 8.01 × 7.99 in | 26,948 |
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.









