Placeholder: Postcard with a portrait of a Black cowboy from the early 1900s Postcard with a portrait of a Black cowboy from the early 1900s

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Prompt

Postcard with a portrait of a Black cowboy from the early 1900s

distorted image, malformed body, malformed fingers

13 days ago

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Model

SSD-1B

Guidance Scale

7

Dimensions

832 × 1248

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Nat Love, the most famous African cowboy of the Old West, a true legend of the frontier. With the spirit of a warrior and the heart of a lion, he rode alongside the Buffalo Soldiers, a force to be reckoned with in a land where danger lurked at every turn. His name struck fear into the hearts of outlaws and admiration in the eyes of those who knew his story.
Mary Fields, commonly known as “Stagecoach Mary,” was the first African American woman to work as a mail carrier for the United States Postal Service in the late 1800s. She was born into slavery in Tennessee in 1832 and gained her freedom following the Civil War. Mary went to Montana in 1885 and quickly rose to prominence in the town of Cascade. The Ursuline Convent in St. Peter’s Mission engaged her to do a variety of chores, including driving children to school and conducting errands. She the
Sarah Bowman, dubbed “The Great Western,” was a female rancher and cattle driver who rose to prominence as one of Texas’ most successful female ranchers in the mid-1800s. She was born in Tennessee in the 1810s and came to Texas as a young woman with her family. Sarah rapidly got into the ranching business, working as a cattle driver and ranch worker. She was well-known for her firearms skills and for her toughness when dealing with challenging livestock. She eventually married a rancher, Charl
The amazing Annie Oakley: Meet the legendary American sharpshooter from the old West - Click Americana Annie Oakley wasn't just the best female sharpshooter - she was THE best. She once sent a shot right through the bullseye, then someone bet she couldn't shoot through the hole she had just made.
[high res photo cover] 1902 Cowboy magazine, special issue on Black cowboys, guest star: Nat Love, the most famous African cowboy of the Old West, [title of the mag in rope letters]
The tale of the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral would not be complete without Doc Holliday and his common-law wife Katherine Haroney. “Big Nose Kate”, as she was known, was a prostitute by choice. In her words, she didn’t want to belong to one man or one house. Paradoxically, she later became the long-time partner of the legendary gunslinger and gambler Doc Holliday. Doc proclaimed her an intellectual equal, although their relationship was volatile. Sadly, the constant fighting between the two alm
Rose Dunn was a famous outlaw who learned to rope, ride, and shoot from her two older brothers. They also inadvertently introduced their formally-educated sister into a life of crime. In her early teens, Rose met a friend of her brothers named George “Bittercreek” Newcomb. From the start, the romantic tension between the two was obvious. With constant and fierce defense of Dunn at all times, Newcomb won the girl’s unwavering loyalty. As the years went by, Rose’s older brothers turned to bounty
The amazing Annie Oakley: Meet the legendary American sharpshooter from the old West - Click Americana Annie Oakley wasn't just the best female sharpshooter - she was THE best. She once sent a shot right through the bullseye, then someone bet she couldn't shoot through the hole she had just made.
Marlon in One-Eyed Jacks
"Nellie Brown Portrait - Black Cowgirl 1880 Print Poster Introducing the perfect means to print art on - the premium matte vertical posters. Made with museum-grade paper (175gsm fine art paper), these posters translate any digital artwork into exquisite real life décor.
Rose Dunn, commonly known as “Rose of the Cimarron,” was a legendary person in the Wild West who was associated with bandit organizations in the late 1800s. She was born in 1879 in Oklahoma and grew up on a ranch. George “Bittercreek” Newcomb, Rose’s brother, was a famed bandit and member of the Wild Bunch gang led by Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Rose joined the group and was known to have assisted them in their criminal actions, including concealing them at her family’s ranch. Rose was
Mary Fields was a pioneer of the Old West as the first female African-American Star Route mail carrier. Born in Tennessee, she is also known as “Black Mary” or “Stagecoach Mary”. When slavery ended in the United States, Mary found work as a chambermaid on a Mississippi River steamboat. However, she soon moved to Ohio as her family circumstances changed. At the age of sixty, Mary Fields applied to work for the US Postal service. She impressed the recruiter by being the fastest to hitch up her s

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