{"title":"How to Embroider a Lavender Stem (Beginner, 2 Stitches)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/embroidery/how-to-embroider-lavender","category":{"slug":"embroidery","name":"Embroidery"},"creator":{"name":"ALK Stitching","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2EEbXLWxwvfCAVy8Yt8pvw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWZgil2J1_Q"},"tldr":"Stitch a botanical lavender stem in two stitches - stem stitch and lazy daisy. Beginner hoop art in 2-color floss on cream linen, no transfer skills needed.","totalDurationSeconds":522,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Embroidery hoop (4 inch or 6 inch)","Embroidery needle (size 5 or 7)","Embroidery scissors","Water-soluble fabric pen","Pencil"],"materials":["Cream cotton or linen fabric (8x8 inch minimum)","Embroidery floss - lavender purple (DMC 208 + 209)","Embroidery floss - deep violet (DMC 333 or 550)","Embroidery floss - sage green (DMC 581 or 988)","Backing felt or fabric (optional, for finishing)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Transfer the Lavender Pattern","text":"Trace the lavender shape onto cream cotton or linen with a water-soluble fabric pen. The pattern is simple - a single vertical line for the stem, a cluster of small bud shapes stacked at the top, and two small leaf shapes near the base. Sketch it freehand if you are comfortable, or print a reference and trace through the fabric on a lightbox or a sunny window.Keep the lines light. Heavy ink can bleed past the edge of your stitches and show on the finished piece. The buds do not need to be drawn perfectly - lazy daisy stitches will define the actual shape. Just mark roughly where each bud will sit."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Hoop the Fabric and Thread the Needle","text":"Drop the fabric into your embroidery hoop with the pattern centered, then tighten until the fabric is drum-tight. A taut surface is the difference between clean stitches and puckered ones. Tug gently around the edges to even out the tension.Thread an embroidery needle with 2 strands of sage green floss - DMC 581 or 988 both work. Cut a length about the distance from your hand to your elbow. Longer thread tangles; shorter thread runs out mid-row. Knot the tail end of the floss."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Stem Stitch the Main Stalk","text":"Bring the needle up at the bottom of your stem line. Take a small forward stitch (about 3 to 4 mm) up the line, then bring the needle back up halfway along that first stitch, with the working thread looping out to one side of the needle.That is one stem stitch. Pull through, take the next forward stitch, come up halfway back - always keeping the thread on the same side of the needle. The result is a tight, rope-like line that follows the curve of your stalk. Work all the way up to where the buds will sit."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Stitch the Leaves at the Base","text":"Switch to 3 strands of green floss for the leaves - the extra thread gives them more presence than the slim stem. Work parallel diagonal stitches across each leaf shape, packing them tight so no fabric peeks through. This is satin stitch and it is the only stitch in this tutorial besides stem and lazy daisy.Angle the stitches along the natural slope of the leaf - tip toward base. Two small leaves at the bottom of the stem ground the whole composition. Without them, the lavender looks like it is floating."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Start the First Lazy Daisy Bud","text":"Switch to 6 strands of lavender purple floss - DMC 208 for a rich purple or 209 for a softer lilac. Six strands is right for lazy daisy because the loop needs body to read as a bud.Bring the needle up at the base of the first bud (the lowest one, right above the top of your stem). Take it back down right next to that same hole - not through it, but a hair away. Pull the thread part way through so a loop is left on the surface. Bring the needle back up at the tip of where the bud should end, with the loop caught around the needle. Pull snug - the thread forms a teardrop. Anchor with a tiny stitch over the tip of the loop."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Cluster Lazy Daisies into a Full Bud Column","text":"Work pairs of lazy daisy stitches up the stem, alternating left and right of the center line. Each pair makes one cluster - two small petals facing each other. Below each cluster, the green stem peeks through; above each cluster sits the next pair.The lower clusters can be slightly larger and more open. As you work toward the top, make the clusters tighter and smaller so the column tapers to a point. Finish with one single closed bud right at the very tip - that pointed cap is what makes the silhouette read as lavender and not as wisteria."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Add a Second Stem in a Deeper Shade","text":"One lavender stem looks lonely; two looks like a bouquet. Repeat the full sequence - stem stitch up, leaves at the base, lazy-daisy buds up the column - in a deeper purple like DMC 333 or 550. Place the second stem an inch or so to the right of the first.Two-tone lavender is the classic Provence look. Light purple in front, deep purple behind, or alternate three stems in light-medium-dark to push the look closer to a real lavender row. The same two stitches repeat - you are not learning anything new, just doubling down on what works."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Finish and Display in the Hoop","text":"On the back of the hoop, tie off each color by passing the needle under a few existing stitches and snipping the tail short. Knots on the back can show through as small bumps on the front, so weave-and-snip is cleaner.Press the finished piece face-down on a folded towel with a warm iron - this flattens any puckers and makes the satin-stitch leaves sit smooth. Trim the excess fabric to about an inch outside the hoop, glue the edge under the inner ring, and either back it with felt or leave the raw fabric as-is. Tighten the screw and hang it on the wall."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-06-08T14:59:40.229Z","published":"2026-06-08T14:57:57.353Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}