Placeholder: thirtymilesout: Miss Wyoming and Miss Colorado-1920 Cheyenne, Wyoming thirtymilesout: Miss Wyoming and Miss Colorado-1920 Cheyenne, Wyoming

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thirtymilesout: Miss Wyoming and Miss Colorado-1920 Cheyenne, Wyoming

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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thirtymilesout: Miss Wyoming and Miss Colorado-1920 Cheyenne, Wyoming
You can’t talk about the ladies of the Wild West without Annie Oakley. At the height of her fame, Annie was a headliner in Buffalo Bills’ Wild West Show. Widely known as “Little Sure Shot” Oakley, she was an incredible sharpshooter and world-renowned master of dangerous trick shots. She could shoot a cigar from the lips of willing participants, and hit targets over her shoulder using only a mirror to aim.
Lillian Russell -one of the most famous actresses and singers of the late 19th-early 20th centuries. Known for her beauty & style and voice & stage presence, she was referred to as "The American Beauty"
Annie Oakley (1860-1926) was an American West performer and sharpshooter who became a symbol of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. She was born in Ohio and started shooting at a young age, relying on her skills to support her family after her father died. Oakley rose to notoriety as a markswoman, winning a number of shooting competitions and starring in shows such as Buffalo Bill’s Wild West. She was known for her accuracy and precision when it came to shooting small and distant
Possibly the most notorious female outlaw and gunslinger of the Wild West was Belle Starr. Born in 1848, Belle was a classically-educated young lady whose life turned upside down following a Union soldier attack in the early American Civil War. Soon after the attack, her family moved to Texas where Belle reunited with childhood friends none other than notorious Jesse James and the Younger brothers. Soon, she was proficient in various forms of organized crime. She mastered the arts of fencing
The mid-nineteenth-century stage thus became a space and time for exploring and criticizing social ideas of femininity. Both Buszek and theater historian Theresa Saxon describe a period of often daring, sometimes chaotic work by women onstage. In the 1840s, Charlotte Cushman famously appeared in drag, playing roles including the male lead in Romeo and Juliet. The actress Adah Isaacs Menken was equally willing to self-promote with topless cartes de visite and images of her in stage costume or in
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.
[Jason and the Argonauts (1963)] close to the old town of Nazareth, a view on the Lake of Genesareth. a young woman in linen dress, she has her wooden rod she looks at the people down around the shore
One of the toughest, albeit lesser-known cowgirls of the Wild West was Goldie Griffith. Goldie joined a small group of showgirls working with Buffalo Bill. Hired without knowing how to ride a horse, Goldie soon learned to bust broncos for the show. Fuelled by her newfound skills, she also began working as an actress and stunt rider in Western movies. On one particular Wild West Show, an astonishing crowd of 8,000 witnessed her tie the knot with Hiram Joseph Sterling. The couple had one child,
Another of the infamous ladies of the Wild West was a cowgirl named Pearl Hart. She made a name for herself as the only female stagecoach robber in the history of Arizona. Born on Canadian land in 1876, this nineteenth-century outlaw is most well-known for committing some of the last stagecoach robberies in the United States. Hart liked to dress as a man, with hair shorn, and arm herself with a .38 revolver. Together with her accomplice “Joe Boot”, Hart committed crimes like there was no tomo
[colour picture: Jason and the Argonauts (1963)] As the night wears on, Surpanakha's vengeance knows no bounds. The forest becomes a stage for her savage dance, a symphony of pain and terror. With a deep breath, she gathers what little remains of her belongings. Her dress, tattered and stained, serves as a reminder of the life she once had. Her dagger, a symbol of her resilience and self-defense, feels reassuring in her grip. And her magic rod, a conduit of her power and creativity, pulses with
Annie Oakley (August 13, 1860 – November 3, 1926), born Phoebe Ann Moses, was an American sharpshooter and exhibition shooter. Oakley's "amazing talent" led to a starring role in Buffalo Bill's Wild.

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