A message, not a hint.
“Lover, You Should’ve Come Over” is stitched in inky black script across a soft white felt base, framed with a powder-blue embroidered border. Above it, a peach ribbon ties itself neatly at the centre; below, a red heart anchors a garland of pink roses and green leaves. It reads like a line lifted from an old love letter — direct, a little dramatic, impossible to ignore.
The embroidery is tight and textured, with just enough shine in the thread to catch the light. It feels considered rather than cutesy: romantic, yes, but with backbone.
There’s room to play with placement. It works on denim, cord, canvas — somewhere it can sit flat and speak clearly. Not oversized, not shy. Just a rectangular frame around a very specific sentiment.
It doesn’t ask politely.
It states the case.
A patch for the bold-hearted.
