{"product_id":"vintage-wildflower-meadow","title":"Vintage Wildflower Meadow Embroidery Design, Instant Download","description":"\u003cp\u003eThis vintage wildflower meadow is the kinda design that looks like it fell outta an old botanical sketchbook. The flowers cluster together at the base, stems crossing and weaving, and they rise up at different heights so the whole bunch feels wild rather than arranged. Some blooms are wide open with rounded petals, others are still tight round buds on tall stems. Gonna be honest, the variation in height and shape is what makes it look so natural. Theres thin grass blades and little leafy sprigs woven between the flower heads that fill the gaps without crowding.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eColour palette is warm and earthy. The bigger open blooms go in a rich burnt orange. The smaller petals and the buds stay cream-white with tan shading. Stems and grasses are olive and brown, all sitting within a narrow warm range that makes the whole thing feel unified. The crosshatch shading on the petals adds depth without loading on extra thread colours, kinda like a copper engraving printed in ink. I've been digitising botanical pieces for years and this is one where the stitch direction on the petal fills really earns its place.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eMy niece runs a small wildflower jewellery business and I made this originally for her packaging. She uses it on linen pouches and card-stock gift tags stamped from a custom patch. Since then I get orders from a few other handmade goods sellers who do cottage-style home products. It sits really nicely on natural materials. Trailing fragment that just works. Timeless in that way.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eStitch on cream linen, oatmeal cotton, or natural hessian for the best vintage feel. Avoid synthetic or bright white fabric because the warm orange pops best on off-white and natural tones, its just too cool and clean otherwise. Pop the 7.5-inch across a tote front, or the 5-inch on a cushion cover centre. Skip stretchy knit fabric here, the fine crosshatch fill sections need a stable woven base to hold clean.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eStitch count is 28k on the smallest and climbs to 63k on the biggest, so give it a proper cutaway stabiliser underneath on anything finer than medium-weight linen. Hoop the linen drum-tight and use a water-soluble topping on the textured weave so the crosshatch lines dont sink into the fabric grain. If theyre sinking, youve got the tension wrong. Bug me on chat if anything looks off when you stitch it out.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Re Embroidery","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":46379576164502,"sku":null,"price":4.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0699\/6262\/9270\/files\/VintageWildflowerMeadowEmbroideryDesign.png?v=1778408069","url":"https:\/\/reembroidery.com\/products\/vintage-wildflower-meadow","provider":"Re Embroidery","version":"1.0","type":"link"}