Flowers & PlantsBeginner

Succulent Cross Stitch Pattern

A beginner succulent chart sized at 25×30 stitches (~750 stitches total). This page includes a real pre-generated stock pattern you can start from immediately, then refine, export, and edit after you sign in.

Succulent stock pattern preview

Grid

25×30

Palette

8 colors

Craft

Cross stitch

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Pattern details

Grid size

25×30

Stitch count

~750

Difficulty

Beginner

Palette

8 colors

Fabric count

14-count Aida

Want a custom size or color palette? StitchLark's AI lets you resize any pattern, swap DMC colors, and adjust the stitch count before exporting your PDF chart. Try it free →

How to create your succulent pattern

  1. 1

    Describe or upload

    Type "Succulent cross stitch pattern" into StitchLark's AI chat, or upload a photo you love. The AI understands color, composition, and stitch style.

  2. 2

    AI generates your chart

    The AI converts your image or description into a full DMC-color cross stitch chart. Adjust the grid size, color count, and stitch density in real time.

  3. 3

    Export and stitch

    Download a print-ready PDF packet with color and black-and-white symbol charts, DMC thread numbers, and a numbered grid. Start stitching in minutes.

Tips for stitching succulents

  • Use two strands of floss for petals and one strand for fine stem details.

  • Blend two similar shades in your needle for a natural gradient effect.

  • French knots make excellent flower centres — work them last to avoid tangling.

  • Start from the centre of the flower and work outward for the most consistent coverage.

Frequently asked questions

What fabric count should I use for a flower cross stitch pattern?

14-count Aida is ideal for beginners — the holes are easy to see and the finished size is comfortable to work with. If you want finer detail in a smaller space, 18-count or 28-count evenweave gives you more stitches per inch.

How many DMC colors do I typically need for a flower pattern?

Most flower patterns use 5–12 colors. A simple daisy might need just 3–4 shades, while a detailed rose or peony with realistic shading can use 10–15 different DMC threads.

Can I customize the color palette of my flower pattern?

Yes. StitchLark lets you swap any color in the palette before you export your chart. Warm the design up with pinks, or cool it down with purples.

Comparing charting tools before you generate your own pattern? Compare pattern tools →

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