Placeholder: Welsh mining women of the 19th century who toiled for 12 hours a day The remarkable portraits (pictured), taken in the 1860s, show the female workers who toiled for long hours at Welsh mines using heavy equipment to break ironstones Welsh mining women of the 19th century who toiled for 12 hours a day The remarkable portraits (pictured), taken in the 1860s, show the female workers who toiled for long hours at Welsh mines using heavy equipment to break ironstones

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Prompt

Welsh mining women of the 19th century who toiled for 12 hours a day The remarkable portraits (pictured), taken in the 1860s, show the female workers who toiled for long hours at Welsh mines using heavy equipment to break ironstones

doubles, twins, entangled fingers, Worst Quality, ugly, ugly face, watermarks, undetailed, unrealistic, double limbs, worst hands, worst body, Disfigured, double, twin, dialog, book, multiple fingers, deformed, deformity, ugliness, poorly drawn face, extra_limb, extra limbs, bad hands, wrong hands, poorly drawn hands, messy drawing, cropped head, bad anatomy, lowres, extra digit, fewer digit, worst quality, low quality, jpeg artifacts, watermark, missing fingers, cropped, poorly drawn

1 year ago

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Model

SSD-1B

Guidance Scale

7

Dimensions

832 × 1248

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Welsh mining women of the 19th century who toiled for 12 hours a day The remarkable portraits (pictured), taken in the 1860s, show the female workers who toiled for long hours at Welsh mines using heavy equipment to break ironstones
Pearl Hart was a Canadian-born bandit who rose to prominence after participating in a stagecoach heist in Arizona in 1899. She was one of the few women at the period to commit such a crime, and her story swiftly became legend. Pearl Hart was born in 1871 in Ontario, Canada, to a destitute family and moved to the United States as a teenager. She married a mining engineer called Robert “Dutch” Hart and relocated to Arizona with him. The marriage, however, was miserable, and Pearl became restless
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