🔔 Only digital format, instant download.
✎ Cross Stitch Pattern -=Tiger II=-. The pattern comes in .PDF format.
★ Pattern specification for different types of fabric.
• Fabric: Aida.
• Colors: 35. Palette: DMC.
• Size: 200 × 120 stitches.
• Finished size will vary depending on the count fabric/canvas you choose.
✔ 14 count ⇒ Size: 14.29 × 8,57 inches | 36.3 × 21.77 cm
✔ 16 count ⇒ Size: 12.50 × 7.50 inches | 31.75 × 19.05 cm
✔ 18 count ⇒ Size: 11.11 × 6.67 inches | 28.22 × 16.94 cm
💾 5 PDF includes:
1. FIVE SCHEMES (Fabric: 16 count Sky Blue 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.
✎ Tiger II: PDF pattern, cross stitch pattern, printable cross stitch, cross stitch pattern for download, printable PDF pattern.
🔎 The Tiger II is a German heavy tank of the Second World War. The final official German designation was Panzerkampfwagen Tiger Ausf. B, often shortened to Tiger B. It is also known under the informal name Königstiger (the German name for the Bengal tiger), often translated literally as Royal Tiger, or somewhat incorrectly as King Tiger by Allied soldiers, especially by American forces.
🔎 Two turret designs were used in production vehicles. The initial design is often misleadingly called the Tiger II (P), after the "Porsche" turret due to the misbelief that it was designed by Porsche for their prototype; in fact it was the initial Krupp design for both prototypes. This turret had a rounded front and steeply sloped sides, with a difficult-to-manufacture curved bulge on the turret's left side to accommodate the commander's cupola. Fifty early turrets were mounted to Henschel's hull and used in action.
🔎 The King Tiger was developed late in the war and built in relatively small numbers. Orders were placed for 1,500 Tiger IIs - slightly more than the 1,347 Tiger I tanks produced - but production was severely disrupted by Allied bombing raids.
🔎 The first combat use of the Tiger II was by the 1st Company of the 503rd Heavy Panzer Battalion (s.H.Pz.Abt. 503) during the Battle of Normandy, opposing Operation Atlantic between Troarn and Demouville on 18 July 1944. Two were lost in combat, while the company commander's tank became irrecoverably trapped after falling into a bomb crater created during Operation Goodwood. On the Eastern Front, it was first used on 12 August 1944 by the 501st Heavy Panzer Battalion (s.H.Pz.Abt. 501) resisting the Lvov-Sandomierz Offensive.