Happy Valentine’s Day Cross Stitch Pattern | Pigeons | Heart
Happy Valentine’s Day cross stitch pattern
🔎 Happy Saint Valentine’s Day: cross stitch pattern, printable PDF pattern, printable cross stitch, embroidery pattern PDF, PDF pattern.
🔔 Only digital format.
🔎 The pattern comes in .PDF format.
★ Pattern specification for different types of fabric
• Fabric: Aida.
• Colors: 8. Palette: DMC.
• Size: 80 × 80 stitches.
• Finished size will vary depending on the count fabric/canvas you choose.
✔ 14 count ⇒ Size: 5.71 x 5.71 inches | 14.51 x 14.51 cm
✔ 16 count ⇒ Size: 5.00 × 5.00 inches | 12.7 × 12.7 cm
✔ 18 count ⇒ Size: 4.44 × 4.44 inches | 11.28 × 11.28 cm
💾 5 PDF includes:
1. FIVE SCHEMES (Fabric: 14 count White 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.
⛔ Returns & exchanges. This is a digital product and I don’t accept returns, exchanges, or cancellations.
❤ Feel free to contact me if you have any further questions.
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✎ Reference Information.
🔎 Valentine’s Day, also called Saint Valentine’s Day or the Feast of Saint Valentine, is celebrated annually on February 14. It originated as a Western Christian feast day honoring one or two early saints named Valentinus. Saint Valentine’s Day is an official feast day in the Anglican Communion and the Lutheran Church.
🔎 Valentine’s Day is recognized as a significant cultural, religious, and commercial celebration of romance and romantic love in many regions around the world, although it is not a public holiday in any country. In the United States, about 190 million Valentine’s Day cards are sent each year, not including the hundreds of millions of cards school children exchange.
❤ Valentine’s Day is mentioned ruefully by Ophelia in William Shakespeare’s Hamlet (1600–1601):
“To-morrow is Saint Valentine’s day,
All in the morning betime,
And I a maid at your window,
To be your Valentine.
Then up he rose, and donn’d his clothes,
And dupp’d the chamber-door;
Let in the maid, that out a maid
Never departed more.”
(William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act IV, Scene 5)