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Tips5 min readFebruary 28, 2026

Reduce Colors in a Cross Stitch Pattern

Fewer colors in a cross stitch pattern means fewer threads to buy, fewer needle changes, and a simpler stitching experience. But how do you reduce colors without ruining the look of your pattern?

Why Reduce Colors?

Photo-based patterns can produce 30, 40, or even more DMC colors. That's a lot of thread to manage. Here's why reducing colors makes sense:

  • Lower cost — Fewer DMC skeins to purchase
  • Simpler stitching — Less thread swapping while you work
  • Cleaner look — Removing near-duplicate colors can actually improve the pattern
  • Faster completion — Less time managing threads means more time stitching

Automatic Color Reduction

Most [pattern makers](/cross-stitch-pattern-maker) let you set a maximum color count before generating your pattern. This is the easiest way to control colors:

  • Set your color limit to 15-20 for most photo conversions
  • The algorithm merges similar colors to stay within your limit
  • Preview the result and adjust if needed

Start with a lower number and increase if the pattern doesn't look right. It's easier to add colors than remove them after the fact.

Manual Color Reduction

For more control, reduce colors manually after generating your pattern:

Identify Similar Colors

Look at your DMC thread list. Are there two or three shades of the same color? For example, DMC 318 (light steel gray) and DMC 414 (dark steel gray) might both appear when one would suffice.

Check Stitch Counts

Colors that appear in only a few stitches are candidates for removal. If a color covers less than 2% of the pattern, merging it into a similar color won't noticeably change the result.

StitchCraft App

Turn Any Photo Into a Cross Stitch Pattern

  • Accurate DMC color matching
  • Track progress stitch by stitch
  • Export print-ready PDF charts
Download Free

iPhone & iPad

StitchCraft sections overview showing a cross stitch pattern divided into workable sections
StitchCraft stitch-by-stitch view with DMC color symbols

Merge Strategically

When merging colors, keep the one that appears more frequently. Replace the less common color with the more common one. This minimizes visual impact.

Preserve Key Details

Some colors are important even in small quantities. Skin tones, eye colors, and small highlights might use few stitches but have a big visual impact. Keep these.

How Many Colors Do You Actually Need?

Here are general guidelines:

Pattern TypeRecommended Colors
Simple icons or silhouettes3-6
Stylized portraits10-15
Detailed photos15-25
Photo-realistic pieces25-40

The Color Reduction Workflow

  1. Generate your pattern with a moderate color limit (20 colors)
  2. Review the pattern preview — does it look right?
  3. Check the DMC thread list for near-duplicate colors
  4. Merge any colors that are too similar to distinguish in the finished piece
  5. Preview again after changes
  6. Repeat until you're satisfied with the balance of detail and simplicity

When Not to Reduce

Some patterns genuinely need more colors:

  • Skin tones — Subtle gradations matter for realistic faces
  • Sunset/sky gradients — Smooth color transitions require more shades
  • Fine art reproductions — Reducing colors can change the mood of the piece

Use the [photo converter](/photo-to-cross-stitch-pattern) to experiment with different color counts. Preview at 10, 15, 20, and 25 colors to see which count looks best for your specific image.

Reducing colors is about finding the sweet spot between simplicity and quality. With practice, you'll develop an eye for which colors can be merged and which are essential.