![]() If there is a problem at any time with payment please let me know. DMC threads needed to complete the design. The finished design measures 5cm x 8.5cm (2 inches x 3.4 inches) Included in this kit. This kit uses cross stitch only, and is suitable for a beginner. I request that payments be made within 4 days. A small cross stitch kit featuring a sitting cat with a tortoiseshell pattern. Accepted payment method for non-UK buyers is PayPal only. Accepted payment methods for UK buyers are PayPal, cheque, & postal orders. Your item may be posted quite quickly, so please contact us if you have changed the address since ordering Payment. Not recommended for children under 7 years of age Please make your payment within 4 days This is an original design - copyright of Fido Stitch Studio Please note that your item will automatically be dispatched to the delivery address showing in your EBAY account when you place your order. This kit contains everything you need to complete your project: 14 count Zweigart aida fabric Pre-sorted Anchor cotton embroidery threads Needle Easy to read b/w symbol chart and full sewing instructions N.B. An Original counted cross stitch kit by Fido Stitch Studio Calico Cat This ‘mini’ stitch kit could be completed in a few hours Stitched design size: 9 x 9.5 cm / 3½” x 3¾” N.B. ![]() Item: 282623035153 Calico Cat, Tortoiseshell kitten - Full counted cross stitch kit + all materials. So having this pattern tells us that your little torbie point had SOME Siamese ancestors, but doesn't tell us how recent those Siamese ancestors were or if the pattern was passed down via some other breed that somehow or other got the pattern - that includes a wide variety of breeds - everything from Himalayan Persians to Ragdolls to Cornish Rex to "Snow" Bengals to American Bobtails to Birmans to Tonkinese, etc.Seller: ✉️ (13,965) 100%, Probably a lot of the spread of this gene from Siamese into the general "domestic shorthair/ longhair" (moggy) population happened in the mid 20th century when Siamese were at the height of their popularity, and fewer people back then got their cats altered, and more people let even pedigreed cats roam around and mate with the moggy down the road. ![]() But o ver the past 100+ years, the pattern has been bred into other breeds, and has also been widely spread through the general random-bred cat populations in many countries, due to Siamese and their mixed breed descendants mating with the local cats. The pointed pattern did originally come from Southeast Asia and got to other countries via Siamese cats. Probably most of the pointed cats of unknown ancestry are less than 0.001% Siamese. A seal point cat of unknown ancestry is not likely to have a higher percentage of Siamese just because it's a seal point ( which is basically a black cat with a pointed pattern.) I don't mean to imply that all seal point cats (or all seal point shorthair cats) ARE Siamese. The reasoning is that it's known that lynx points and red color resulted from crosses to Western cats, since all the Siamese originally imported from Siam long ago had black-based color, in solid not lynx point. The most strict are CFA and CCA/AFC which only allow seal point, blue point, chocolate point and lilac point - the 4 natural colors that Siamese can be without an outcross. Most of the world's cat associations' Siamese standards do allow other colors / patterns like tabby point ( lynx point), red point, tortie point and torbie point. ) If you're asking what colors are officially accepted in pedigreed Siamese cats, it depends on which cat association. ( Or to put it the other way round - it's not abnormal that a tortie or torbie could be pointed. So no, it's not abnormal at all that a cat with a pointed pattern could have tortoiseshell coloring and tabby markings. It can go with ANY coat color or any tabby pattern. )īasically, the pointed (aka colorpoint) pattern, which is caused by inheriting a recessive "cs" allele from both parents, just causes the most dense coat pigment to be restricted to the cooler parts of the body. She would be Seal Torbie Point if the darkest markings are black or very very dark brown, ( If instead, her darkest stripes are grey, that would be Blue Torbie Point. and that would make her a Torbie Point ( Torbie = Tortoiseshell - Tabby) So that sounds like you probably first saw the tabby markings in the black-based color. I am thinking Torbie Point, since you mention at first thinking Lynx Point ( Tabby Point) and later noticing the orange / Red on her. in the dark patches as well as the orange patches. It sounds like this kitten is probably a "Torbie Point", if you see tabby stripes etc.
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