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I seldom see an old cabinet photo of cowboy with a 1894 Marlin. I can't see the boots well enough to tell much about this fellow. The other one is just a neat photo.
I like the guy on horse back. He really looks genuine. The posed photo just looks fake to me.
Actually that revolver and holster looks a lot like the one in the previous pic you posted. Photographers prop???
Joe
***Be sneaky, get closer, bust the cap on him when you can put the ball where it counts .***
I like the old photo's of cowboys. The flat brim hats, cross draws and other accoutrements. It surprises me how many of the old work saddles had tapaderos on them. Neat, keep'em coming.
Are these yours? Where do you keep finding these neat old pics? My old pic collection runs more to the military side of things but old pics in general are very cool to me.
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J Miller wrote:I like the guy on horse back. He really looks genuine. The posed photo just looks fake to me.
Actually that revolver and holster looks a lot like the one in the previous pic you posted. Photographers prop???
Joe
I agree about the 'portrait' style photos - it seems you can't ever tell who is a genuine outdoorsman vs. someone pretending to be. I tend to go by how scruffy they look, but I also know some were very eager to spiff up for a photo, so some genuine outdoorsmen may come across looking fake due to that.
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AJMD429 wrote:
I agree about the 'portrait' style photos - it seems you can't ever tell who is a genuine outdoorsman vs. someone pretending to be. I tend to go by how scruffy they look, but I also know some were very eager to spiff up for a photo, so some genuine outdoorsmen may come across looking fake due to that.
I would think that maybe a bath, shave and new duds might induce a trail hand to have his photo taken, with props, trying to look his best for the folks back home, not knowing that we would prefer the before rather than the after look!
I love old photo's thanks for sharing.
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I was reading a book on the old west and the author mentioned that after a cattle drive was over, a lot of cowboys would be paid, buy some new duds, get a bath, and have their picture taken.
What I find interesting is the number of old photos that seem to be of real riders/cowboys/texas rangers that show the fellows wearing their sixgun in a cross draw position. This may just be me, but I've found with my long-barreled (8") sixgun, that it is just all around more comfortable to wear it in cross draw. In that position, the barrel seems to stay out of the way regardless of what I'm doing, and I find it easier to draw.
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I just couldn't see the footwear well enough to tell. If they are shoes then he's probably a wannabe. His other clothes fit so well though it makes me think they may be his. I guess a wild west show trick shooter could be wearing shoes. That's what makes looking at these old photos so much fun. Some of the photos I put own are mine; some I find on the Internet. These I don't own but would like to.
AJMD429 wrote:
I agree about the 'portrait' style photos - it seems you can't ever tell who is a genuine outdoorsman vs. someone pretending to be. I tend to go by how scruffy they look, but I also know some were very eager to spiff up for a photo, so some genuine outdoorsmen may come across looking fake due to that.
I would think that maybe a bath, shave and new duds might induce a trail hand to have his photo taken, with props, trying to look his best for the folks back home, not knowing that we would prefer the before rather than the after look!
I love old photo's thanks for sharing.
+1 You see this in old photos of men who were not just dandies who were pretending, but were known to be serious lawmen or cowboys. No doubt some of the items were stage props from the photographers in some photos. I have seen photos of Cowboys wearing shoes, but only while sitting on the front porch of ranch/bunkhouses.
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Yes that is whats on the card, Albany Indiana. I don't know but some photographers traveled around the country to bring the West back to the east. This might be the explanation. I have seen this happening before.
Elmer Keith mentioned that he and many other guys when working cattle would slide their pistol over to the left side to keep it out of the way of the rope. It also makes drawing without attracting attention easier while mounted.
I blew this pic up, it sort of looks like the rider has another pistol, also worn cross draw. It looked like a belt buckle at first, but it seems to stick out too much for a buckle based on his build.