🔔 Only digital format, instant download
✎ “It’s hard to beat a person who never gives up” (c) Babe Ruth.
★ Pattern specification for different types of fabric.
• Fabric: 16 count Cream Aida
• Colors: 16. Palette: DMC.
• Size: 150 × 150 stitches.
• Finished size will vary depending on the count fabric/canvas you choose.
✔ 14 count ⇒ Size: 10.71 × 10.71 inches | 27.2 × 27.2 cm
✔ 16 count ⇒ Size: 9.38 × 9.38 inches | 23.81 × 23.81 cm
✔ 18 count ⇒ Size: 8.33 × 8.33 inches | 21.16 × 21.16 cm
💾 5 PDF includes:
1. FIVE SCHEMES (Fabric: 16 count Cream Aida):
• Color Blocks with Symbols.
• Color Symbols.
• Color Blocks.
• Color Crosses.
• Black and White Symbols.
2. Color photo for reference.
3. List of DMC thread colors (instruction and key section).
🔔 Please note this is a digital pattern only! No fabric, floss, or other materials are included in the listing. Feel free to contact me if you have any further questions.
✎ Cross Stitch Pattern -=Baseball | Baseball player | Batter=-. The pattern comes in .PDF format.
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🔎 Baseball is a bat-and-ball game played between two opposing teams who take turns batting and fielding. The game proceeds when a player on the fielding team, called the pitcher, throws a ball which a player on the batting team tries to hit with a bat.
🔎 A baseball game is played between two teams, each composed of nine players, that take turns playing offense (batting and baserunning) and defense (pitching and fielding).
🔎 George Herman "Babe" Ruth Jr. (February 6, 1895 - August 16, 1948) was an American professional baseball player whose career in Major League Baseball (MLB) spanned 22 seasons, from 1914 through 1935. Nicknamed "The Bambino" and "The Sultan of Swat", he began his MLB career as a star left-handed pitcher for the Boston Red Sox, but achieved his greatest fame as a slugging outfielder for the New York Yankees.
🔎 The evolution of baseball from older bat-and-ball games is difficult to trace with precision. Consensus once held that today's baseball is a North American development from the older game rounders, popular among children in Great Britain and Ireland. Baseball Before We Knew It: A Search for the Roots of the Game (2005), by American baseball historian David Block, suggests that the game originated in England; recently uncovered historical evidence supports this position. Block argues that rounders and early baseball were actually regional variants of each other, and that the game's most direct antecedents are the English games of stoolball and "tut-ball".