Placeholder: [art by Russ Meyer] Lee Miller stands with her camera in the battlefield. she shows off her garters. This war photographer is a fascinating figure indeed. She captured powerful images during World War II, showcasing the realities of conflict with a unique perspective. Her work is a testament to the courage and artistry of photojournalists in documenting history. [art by Russ Meyer] Lee Miller stands with her camera in the battlefield. she shows off her garters. This war photographer is a fascinating figure indeed. She captured powerful images during World War II, showcasing the realities of conflict with a unique perspective. Her work is a testament to the courage and artistry of photojournalists in documenting history.

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[art by Russ Meyer] Lee Miller stands with her camera in the battlefield. she shows off her garters. This war photographer is a fascinating figure indeed. She captured powerful images during World War II, showcasing the realities of conflict with a unique perspective. Her work is a testament to the courage and artistry of photojournalists in documenting history.

statue, 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

2 months ago

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SSD-1B

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[art by Russ Meyer] Lee Miller stands with her camera in the battlefield. she shows off her garters. This war photographer is a fascinating figure indeed. She captured powerful images during World War II, showcasing the realities of conflict with a unique perspective. Her work is a testament to the courage and artistry of photojournalists in documenting history.
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
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
Fritz Lang, expensive horror movie scene, Marilyn Monroe in_undies, attacked by a cowboy with a whip, in the desert
[art by Russ Meyer] Lee Miller stands with her camera in the battlefield. she shows off her garters. This war photographer is a fascinating figure indeed. She captured powerful images during World War II, showcasing the realities of conflict with a unique perspective. Her work is a testament to the courage and artistry of photojournalists in documenting history.
[photo by Helmut Newton] Then it was over: that which you fear, being a soul and unable to speak, ending abruptly, the stiff earth bending a little. And what I took to be birds darting in low shrubs. You who do not remember passage from the other world I tell you I could speak again: whatever returns from oblivion returns to find a voice
[art by Russ Meyer] Lee Miller, the war photographer. A fascinating figure indeed. She captured powerful images during World War II, showcasing the realities of conflict with a unique perspective. Her work is a testament to the courage and artistry of photojournalists in documenting history.
Who can forget that 1960's TV show from Toho studios. The Space Giants, along with the heroes of the Science Foundation, who weekly saved the planet from space monsters. Being a childhood fan of Ultra Man, I really enjoyed Bing creating these pictures, and it did so well.
[art by Russ Meyer] Lee Miller stands with her camera in the battlefield. This war photographer is a fascinating figure indeed. She captured powerful images during World War II, showcasing the realities of conflict with a unique perspective. Her work is a testament to the courage and artistry of photojournalists in documenting history.
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,
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
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.

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