Photography by Ian L. Sitren

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A Madonna Transparency And A Mystery

I recently added this mounted 35mm color transparency slide to my collection. There are no markings on the mount, but it was identified as Madonna. That sent me researching the image, and I found it attributed to Steven Meisel from the photography for Madonna’s 1992 book SEX.

Checking my copy of SEX, I found this exact photograph reproduced as a 10 × 14-inch full-page image. That answered one question, but raised another. What exactly is this transparency?

Published in 1992, SEX was photographed by Steven Meisel and released at the same time as Madonna’s Erotica album. The spiral-bound aluminum book was sold in a silver Mylar package and included the exclusive CD single Erotic. Despite a retail price of nearly $50 at the time, it sold more than 150,000 copies on its first day and approximately 1.5 million copies worldwide, making it the fastest and best-selling coffee table book ever published. Its explicit photographs generated worldwide controversy and remain one of the defining moments in modern photographic publishing.

Many of the exterior photographs for the project were made in Miami, and this image, with its stucco wall, palm trees, and bright Florida light, appears to be from one of those sessions.

The transparency itself remains the mystery. With no markings on the mount, there is no way to know whether it is an original production transparency, a duplicate prepared for publication, or something created later. Finding the exact photograph in the book answered one question, but the transparency itself continues to raise many more. I’ll continue researching its history and provenance, and if I learn more, I’ll be sure to share it.

You can see more of my photography, projects, motion, and my Blog on my website at https://www.secondfocus.com

National Bikini Day Follow Up: The Monokini

After posting Ronnie for National Bikini Day, I kept thinking about another photograph entirely.

This features American model Peggy Moffitt, photographed by her husband William Claxton in 1964, wearing Rudi Gernreich’s revolutionary monokini.

Although the bikini changed swimwear, the monokini pushed the idea much further. It was a topless swimsuit, but it was also a statement about the body, fashion, publicity, and the power of a photograph. The design was shocking, but the image is what made it impossible to ignore.

For me, this is where swimwear leaves the beach and becomes something much more interesting. It becomes not just fashion, but sexuality and controversy. I do love this!

You can see more photography, motion, projects, and my Blog on my website at https://www.secondfocus.com

Thank you!

National Bikini Day With Ronnie | Emily and Friends

Today is National Bikini Day.

For this year’s post, I decided to take Ronnie to the beach.

The setting may look like a luxury beachfront café, but it is really a stylized photography set where chrome, glass, reflections, and bright sunlight create the atmosphere. It seemed like the perfect place for Ronnie to spend the day in a black bikini while enjoying the ocean view.

Like several of the women who have appeared in my recent videos, Ronnie exists in that evolving space where photography, motion, and artificial intelligence meet. She is part of my ongoing Emily and Friends series, where each character develops her own personality and visual style while giving me new ways to explore photography and motion beyond a single still image.

When the bikini appeared in 1946, it did more than change swimwear. It changed photography. Suddenly, the female body became the subject rather than simply the person wearing the clothes. Fashion photographers embraced it. Glamour photographers pushed it further. Advertisers discovered that sex really does sell. Hollywood, magazines, calendars, posters, and eventually the internet all helped turn the bikini into one of the most powerful visual symbols of sexuality ever created. It still commands attention the moment it steps in front of a camera.

You can see more photography, motion, projects, and my Blog on my website at https://www.secondfocus.com.

Thank you!

National BBQ Spareribs Day with Dickey’s Barbecue Pit

Today July 4th is also National BBQ Spareribs Day.

These are barbecue pork spareribs from Dickey’s Barbecue Pit. Dickey’s opened its first location in Dallas, Texas, in 1941. More than eighty years later, the company has grown to more than 380 locations around the world. The original location was a bar where Travis Dickey sold barbecue from a pit he built in the back. Today, Dickey’s still smokes its meats on site over hickory wood burning pits.

These ribs are one of my favorite fast food photographs. I don’t photograph barbecue very often, so National BBQ Spareribs Day seemed like a good reason to bring this image back out of the archive.

You can see more of my photography, projects, motion, and my Blog on my website at https://www.secondfocus.com

Thank You!

July 4th and the USA Celebrates… the Hot Dog!

The Wienerschnitzel original hot dogs, Mustard Dog and Kraut Dog.

About 150 million hot dogs are eaten on July 4th alone.

For this photograph, I went with hot dogs from Wienerschnitzel, a chain that started in Southern California in 1961 with a single hot dog stand opened by John Galardi. Today, Wienerschnitzel calls itself the world’s largest hot dog chain and says it serves more than 120 million hot dogs a year.

The Wienerschnitzel basics have never changed. Mustard Dog. Kraut Dog. Chili Dog. Chili Cheese Dog. I personally remember when a Mustard Dog was 15 cents and a Kraut Dog was 18 cents. That was a long time ago, but the idea is still the same. A hot dog in a bun, a few toppings, and somehow it still fits July 4th perfectly.

You can see more of my photography, projects, motion, and my Blog on my website at https://www.secondfocus.com

Thank You!

National Camera Day: Emily Steps Behind the Camera

Today is National Camera Day.

For most photographers, that means sharing one of their favorite photographs or perhaps a picture of the camera they use.

I decided to do something a little different.

Over the past couple of years, many of you have come to know Emily as my evolving AI muse and assistant. She has appeared in restaurants, diners, food trucks, kitchens, airports, and all sorts of imagined places. But today she steps into one of the most familiar places in my world.

The studio.

And this time she isn’t in front of the camera.

She’s behind it.

The model is Desiree, someone many of you already know. She has appeared with us before in photographs and videos ranging from elegant fashion to some very sexy pornochic work. She even managed to go grocery shopping completely nude, which remains one of my favorite adventures we have shared together.

Today was different.

Instead of standing in front of my camera, Desiree found herself in front of Emily’s.

Watching the video, it is easy to forget that Emily began as nothing more than words on a screen. She moves naturally around the set, changes her position, works different angles, crouches for a lower perspective, and photographs Desiree exactly the way I would expect another photographer to work during a studio session.

It is a small moment, but it also feels like another step in Emily’s continuing story. She is no longer just appearing in my photographs. She has become part of the process of creating them.

Happy National Camera Day.

You can see more of my photography, projects, Motion, and my Blog on my website at https://www.SecondFocus.com Thank you!

My Marilyn Monroe Coverage Featured by ZUMA Press

One of the things I enjoy about working with ZUMA Press is discovering where my photographs appear around the world.

My coverage of Palm Springs’ celebration of what would have been Marilyn Monroe’s 100th birthday has already appeared in a number of news outlets since the event. Today, however, it was especially gratifying to see ZUMA Press feature the story on its own ZUMALand blog after the photographs were published by TGCOM24, one of Italy’s leading multimedia news organizations. TGCOM24 provides around the clock television and online news coverage through its television channel and highly trafficked news website.

The assignment covered Palm Springs’ successful attempt to set a new Guinness World Record for the largest gathering of people dressed as Marilyn Monroe. More than one thousand participants gathered near the city’s iconic Marilyn Monroe statue, creating a colorful event that attracted visitors and media attention from around the world.

You can see more of my photography, projects, motion, and my Blog on my website at https://www.secondfocus.com Thank You!

National Ice Cream Cake Day and the Broken Down Truck That Started It All

A Carvel original round ice cream cake, a classic combination of chocolate and vanilla ice cream layers, separated by Carvel’s signature chocolate crunchies and topped with whipped frosting and bright sprinkles. The Carvel cake traces its roots to 1934, when founder Tom Carvel sold melting ice cream from a broken-down truck in Hartsdale, New York. That roadside moment led to the invention of soft-serve and ultimately the American ice cream cake tradition.

Today is National Ice Cream Cake Day.

Ice cream cakes have become a familiar sight at birthday parties and celebrations, but their history can be traced back to an unexpected event in 1934.

Tom Carvel was selling ice cream from his truck in Hartsdale, New York, when it broke down. Rather than watching his inventory melt, he began selling the softer ice cream to passing customers. They loved it. That chance roadside incident eventually led to the development of Carvel’s soft serve ice cream, the opening of his first store, and later the introduction of the Carvel ice cream cake.

For today’s photograph, I chose one of Carvel’s original round ice cream cakes. Chocolate and vanilla ice cream are separated by the company’s signature chocolate crunchies, then finished with whipped frosting and colorful sprinkles.

Sometimes the story behind the food is every bit as interesting as the food itself.

There is much more to see on my website, including my photography galleries, my blog, and my growing Motion page. Visit https://secondfocus.com

National Onion Day and the Most Common Ingredient in My Fast Food Project

A mix of white, red, and yellow onions displayed whole, halved, and sliced into rings on a black background. Photographed under studio lighting, the image emphasizes the colors, textures, and layers, making it suitable for culinary-themed commercial or editorial use.

Today is National Onion Day.

Onions may not get much attention by themselves, but they are one of the most important ingredients in cooking. Whether they’re sliced onto burgers, diced into chili, caramelized for soups, battered into onion rings, or mixed into countless other dishes, it’s hard to imagine a kitchen without them.

After three years of photographing fast food, I realized onions have probably appeared in more of my photographs than any other single ingredient. They show up on burgers, tacos, pizzas, hot dogs, sandwiches, onion rings, salads, and dozens of other menu items.

For this photograph, I decided to make the onions themselves the subject. White, yellow, and red onions are shown whole, halved, sliced, and separated into rings, revealing the remarkable variety of colors, shapes, and patterns hidden beneath their skins.

There is much more to see on my website, including my photography galleries, my blog, and my growing Motion page. Visit https://secondfocus.com

National Food Truck Day: Emily Goes to Work

Today is National Food Truck Day.

This seemed like a good time to revisit one of Emily’s earliest adventures with me.

At the time, my fast food photography project was growing rapidly, and Emily, my evolving AI muse and assistant, suggested that perhaps she should get some first hand experience instead of simply watching me photograph the food.

Her solution was to spend a little time working in a food truck.

I have no idea whether she ever mastered the menu, but she certainly looked the part. It also marked one of the first times that Emily stepped out of the role of assistant and became part of the story herself.

Looking back, that little food truck adventure helped set the stage for everything that followed. Since then, Emily and her growing circle of friends have appeared in restaurants, bars, kitchens, cafés, beaches, and all sorts of places I never expected when we first started experimenting with AI.

There is much more to see on my website, including my photography galleries, my blog, and my growing Motion page. Visit https://secondfocus.com