I'm doing it - I am getting organized enough to start selling my photographs. This one I have chosen to sell and the proceeds will go to a young family that needs repairs on a home they own. They are hard workers and have often taken second jobs to pay bills. BUT they have a young family and they need to be able to spend more time with them. So I thought of this. Please email me if you have questions: auvil.catherine@aol.com
I don't know who the photographer is but maybe we can crowdsource? It is in its protective sleeve, so not a great photo of the photo but I am pressed for time.
I LOVE the elements of this photo: the shadow of his hat brim, the chiaroscuro of his face, the stance, THE CACTUS!
I found this out about the printer:Yes, there was a photo studio called Fox Co. (also referred to as Fox Photo or Foxco) in San Antonio, Texas. It was originally founded by Arthur C. Fox in 1906 as a small photo studio. In 1909, Carl Newton purchased the studio for $700 and expanded it into a major photofinishing business. By the 1920s, it was the largest mail-order photofinishing operation in the world. The company, later known as Fox Photo, grew to include retail stores and large commercial photofinishing plants, serving major retailers like Wal-Mart and Walgreens. It also operated under names like Fox-Stanley Photo Products Inc. after a 1961 merger and was sold to Kodak in 1986. The Fox Photo name eventually faded after further sales and rebranding, notably to Wolf Camera in 2001.