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Buffalo Bill Weekly 9 Tie

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Upgrade your wardrobe with a custom tie from Zazzle! Design one-of-a-kind ties to match any suit, dress shirt, and occasion. Upload your own unique images and patterns, or browse thousands of stylish designs to wear in the office or on a night out in the town.

  • Dimensions:
    • Length: 139 cm
    • Width: 10.1 cm (at widest point)
  • Printed in vibrant full colour
  • Made from 100% polyester; silky finish
  • Double-sided printing available at small upcharge. Check out the "Design Area" tab to the right to customise
  • Dry clean only

About This Design

Buffalo Bill Weekly 9 Tie

Buffalo Bill Weekly 9 Tie

A Dime Western is a modern term for Western themed dime novels, which spanned the era of the 1860s—1900s. Most would hardly be recognisable as a modern western, having more in common with James Fennimore Cooper's Leatherstocking saga, but many of the standard elements originated here: a cool detached hero, a frontiersman (later,a cowboy), a fragile heroine in danger of the despicable outlaw, savage Indians, violence and gunplay, and the final outcome where Truth and Light wins over all. Often real characters — such as Buffalo Bill or the famous Kit Carson — were fictionalised, as were the exploits of notorious outlaws such as Billy the Kid and Jesse James. Buffalo Bill's literary incarnation provides the transition from the frontier tales to the cowboy story, as he straddles both of the genres. There were several different formats. From 1860 to roughly 1880, the stories appeared in small pamphlets, generally about 100 pages each, and sold for ten to fifteen cents. These books were issued at irregular intervals, and they were kept in print for years, as well as being reprinted under different titles. Later, the weekly magazine format came to predominate. These libraries were 32 pages, and sold for a nickel or a dime. Both formats were printed on cheap acidic paper, and relatively few have survived the years, despite circulation measured in the tens of millions. In 1919, Street & Smith cancelled the last of their five cent weeklies (New Buffalo Bill Weekly) and replaced it with the pulp Western Story Magazine, which brought the western into its modern form. The genre continued to evolve as new media came along, and mass market paperbacks and comic books maintained the western story's popularity well into the late twentieth century. Its popularity has waned somewhat in the ensuing years, but it is too soon to count out a resurgence.

Customer Reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars rating2.4K Total Reviews
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2,402 Reviews
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5 out of 5 stars rating
By Amy C.17 May 2022Verified Purchase
Tie
Zazzle Reviewer Program
It's absolutely perfect!! Turned out much better then I expected ❤️ It is a little expensive but very worth it. Printing is perfect can read it very well
4 out of 5 stars rating
By Anonymous14 September 2025Verified Purchase
Tie
I originally ordered 1 tie to test and ensure I liked it with the suits we had ordered! The tie came and it was perfect! We loved it! The colours were bright and the tie was beautifully made. I then ordered the 6 additional ties and the colours are slightly different. The 6 ties were a little less vibrant and the white background was slightly different! .
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Anonymous6 April 2025Verified Purchase
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Lovely. My English class was impressed!

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cowboyscowboyindiansnativeamericanswesternwesternsheroesbuffalobill
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Other Info

Product ID: 151676905200174591
Added on 9/9/09, 5:25 pm
Rating: G