Beautiful handmade embroidery pieces that make thoughtful gifts
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Best Embroidery Projects for Gifts

Six beginner-friendly embroidered gift ideas — each frameable or wearable, with specific kit and floss picks.

Isla Reed Isla Reed
embroiderygifts
On this page
  1. What makes a good handmade embroidered gift?
  2. 1. Small botanical hoop (6–10 hours)
  3. 2. Monogrammed handkerchief or tea towel (3–5 hours)
  4. 3. Embroidered greeting card (2–3 hours)
  5. 4. Hoop art with a name or short quote (5–8 hours)
  6. 5. Small stitch sampler (8–12 hours)
  7. 6. Embroidered canvas tote (5–8 hours)
  8. Which gift to pick for which person
  9. What to avoid as a first embroidered gift

A small botanical hoop, a monogrammed handkerchief, an embroidered greeting card, a hoop-art name or quote, a small sampler, and an embroidered canvas tote are the six beginner-friendly embroidered gifts we’d actually give. Each takes 3–10 hours of work, uses stitches from the first-month toolkit, and produces something small enough to finish in a weekend.

What makes a good handmade embroidered gift?

Three things. It should be small enough to finish — big pieces are ambitious for a beginner and easy to abandon. It should be personal, because ‘handmade’ and ‘for you specifically’ combine to make embroidered gifts deeply appreciated. And it should use stitches you’ve practised — first-attempt French knots on the gift itself is a recipe for frustration.

Every project below fits all three bars. None require techniques beyond the first month of embroidery: running stitch, back stitch, satin stitch, French knot, stem stitch, chain stitch.

1. Small botanical hoop (6–10 hours)

The classic giftable embroidery project. A 4- or 6-inch wooden hoop with a simple botanical design — a few stems, leaves and flower heads in tonal greens and one accent colour — reads as artful and hand-crafted without taking 30 hours.

Use a 4- or 6-inch beech wood hoop, a tightly-woven cotton or quilting linen, DMC six-strand floss in 4–5 tonal colours, and John James crewel needles. Jessica Long Embroidery sells brilliant beginner-level botanical kits at around £18–25 that include fabric, floss, needle and pattern.

If you’ve finished the ending project from [[Adriana Torres’ Contemporary Embroidery for Beginners|/embroidery/courses/domestika-contemporary-embroidery/]], you already have the skills for a small botanical hoop. Total cost: ~£18 with kit, ~£10 with loose materials. Total time: 6–10 hours over a week.

2. Monogrammed handkerchief or tea towel (3–5 hours)

A single monogrammed initial in neat back stitch or satin stitch on a plain white cotton handkerchief or tea towel is one of the highest-ratio gifts we know — minimal work, deeply personal, genuinely used.

Use a plain white cotton handkerchief (around £3–5) or a linen tea towel (around £6–10). Print a letter in a font you like (serif like Baskerville reads well in embroidery), trace it onto fabric with a water-soluble fabric pen, and work in back stitch (for outline letters) or satin stitch (for filled letters). DMC embroidery floss in a single colour is all you need.

3–5 hours for back-stitch monograms, 5–8 hours for satin-stitch filled letters. Total cost: ~£10 including fabric. A genuinely gift-worthy piece for a small evening’s work.

3. Embroidered greeting card (2–3 hours)

A card-size piece of embroidery mounted onto a plain card blank is a small, frameable keepsake that doubles as a greeting card — perfect for a milestone birthday, new home, or wedding.

Work a simple design (flowers, a small word, a house outline) on a 8×10 cm piece of linen or cotton, then mount onto a plain blank card using double-sided tape or PVA glue. StitchCrafty and Miniature Rhino both sell card-embroidery templates; or use a pre-printed card-sized piece of linen from an embroidery supply shop.

2–3 hours per card. Total cost: ~£5 per card. Ideal for when you want ‘handmade’ without a multi-hour commitment.

4. Hoop art with a name or short quote (5–8 hours)

A 6-inch hoop with a name, a child’s birth date, or a short sentimental quote (couples’ wedding date, a favourite song lyric, a new-baby announcement) is one of the most kept-and-displayed gifts we’ve tracked.

Choose a script font and a mid-sized hoop size. Work text in back stitch (fast, crisp) or chain stitch (more decorative, slightly slower). Add a small surrounding motif — a wreath, stars, or a leafy border — to fill the hoop.

Free beginner templates: Sarah Homfray Embroidery’s free ‘Hoop Art Alphabet’ downloadable on her site; or any of the DMC free patterns from their Mon & the Cosmos or Stitcher’s Retreat collections. Total cost: ~£10. Total time: 5–8 hours spread across a few evenings.

5. Small stitch sampler (8–12 hours)

A sampler — a rectangle of fabric featuring rows of different stitch types — is a thoughtful gift for another crafter, or a beautiful piece for someone who values ‘slow’ aesthetics. It’s also genuinely useful as a gift because the skill it demonstrates is legible even to non-embroiderers.

Use a larger piece of cotton or linen (roughly 15×20 cm) framed in a rectangular hoop or mounted on stretcher bars. Work 5–7 rows of different stitches: running, back, stem, chain, satin, French knot, feather stitch. Use a single thread colour for a clean minimalist finish, or gradients of one colour family.

Mollie Johanson’s ‘Beginner Sampler’ is a well-known free pattern; the Sublime Stitching ‘First Stitches’ sampler is another beginner-friendly option. Total cost: ~£12. Total time: 8–12 hours — slower because each row uses a different technique.

6. Embroidered canvas tote (5–8 hours)

An embroidered addition to a plain canvas tote bag — a small design on one side, or a monogram — produces a wearable, kept-and-used gift.

Start with a blank canvas tote (around £5 from craft shops or Amazon). Stretch a small section in a hoop while you embroider. Use thicker embroidery thread (DMC Pearl Cotton, or six-strand floss used 6-strands-at-once) — it reads more boldly against canvas than fine embroidery thread.

Designs that work well: a short word (‘BRUNCH’, ‘BOOKS’, a name), a small icon (a coffee cup, a single flower stem), or a monogram. Keep the design under 8 cm for a beginner. Total cost: ~£8. Total time: 5–8 hours.

Which gift to pick for which person

For a close friend or family member: the name-hoop or monogrammed handkerchief. Personalisation is what elevates these gifts.

For a new-home or wedding gift: the botanical hoop or the sampler. Both look at-home on a wall or shelf.

For a birthday or sentiment-heavy occasion: the quote hoop or embroidered card. Short, personal, keepsake-worthy.

For a colleague or friend’s child: the canvas tote. Practical, wearable, feels like thought went in.

What to avoid as a first embroidered gift

Ambitious portraiture (pets, people) on your first attempts — likeness is genuinely hard and disappointing when it doesn’t land. Large detailed pieces (anything over 8-inch hoop) — too many hours, too much commitment. Very fine-thread work (split stitch, long-and-short in multiple colours) — saves this for your third or fourth piece.

Stick to small, simple, high-impact designs for g

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FAQs

Everything you need to know before you book.

How long does an embroidered gift take to make?

Most beginner-friendly embroidered gifts take 3–12 hours of work, spread over a weekend or a week of evenings. Monogrammed handkerchiefs are 3–5 hours; small botanical hoops 6–10 hours; samplers 8–12 hours. Avoid anything over 15 hours for your first giftable piece.

What's the easiest embroidered gift for a beginner?

A monogrammed handkerchief or an embroidered greeting card. Both use only back stitch or satin stitch, take a single evening, and produce something genuinely personal.

Should I buy a kit or source materials separately?

Kits are strongly recommended for your first few giftable pieces. Hawthorn Handmade, Jessica Long Embroidery and Clever Poppy all sell beginner-friendly kits in the £15–25 range with everything pre-selected. Sourcing separately makes sense once you know what you like.

Which floss should I use for embroidered gifts?

DMC six-strand cotton floss is the industry standard — widely available, consistent colour, good for almost any project. Anchor floss is an equally good alternative. Use 2 strands for fine details, 6 for bold work on canvas.

Can I embroider a gift as a total beginner?

Yes — embroidered gifts are one of the fastest giftable project categories because each stitch is visible immediately. A monogrammed handkerchief is a realistic first-project gift within your first week of embroidery.

How do I finish the back of an embroidery hoop for gifting?

Trim the excess fabric to about 2 cm beyond the hoop, run a gathering stitch around the edge, pull tight and knot. Glue a circle of felt over the gathered back for a clean finish. Takes about 15 minutes and makes the difference between 'handmade' and 'gift-ready'.

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