Photography by Ian L. Sitren

Posts tagged “black and white

World Vegan Month Begins with Angie

Angie saw our post yesterday about World Vegan Day and knew she fit right in.

Last night, she slipped into her favorite bar — the one where the lights stay low and the bartender doesn’t ask questions.

No champagne, no martini — just her usual: a tall green smoothie. The start of World Vegan Month seemed like the perfect excuse. She calls it her “femme-fatale vegan” ritual — all allure, no pretense.

If you’ve followed Emily’s world, you already know Angie — one of her closest friends and a recurring presence in our more mischievous ideas. Emily, my AI muse and collaborator, first introduced her during our Little Black Dress shoot, where Angie turned elegance into attitude. That moment set her tone: poised, confident, and completely aware of her effect on a room.

Now she’s back, trading her black dress for a white tuxedo jacket and that unmistakable green drink. Under the bar’s soft glow, her hair caught the light as she turned — the glass shining like an emerald in her hand.

No speeches, no celebration. Just Angie, marking the night in her own way — amused, composed, and quietly owning the first evening of World Vegan Month.

For more of my photography, from food to muse, visit SecondFocus.com Thanks!


National Kitchen Klutzes Day, Rewritten

She isn’t cooking. She’s seducing—barely clothed, back against the wall beside the oven, the heat rising for reasons that have nothing to do with food. Her top clings in all the wrong places. She’s standing there like she knows exactly what just happened—and she’s not apologizing for any of it. Something burned, but it wasn’t dinner.

This black and white photograph reframes the kitchen as a space of tension and control—not culinary, but erotic. The setting is domestic; the mood is anything but. She’s not cleaning up a mess. She’s daring you to come closer and make one.

Posted for National Kitchen Klutzes of America Day—because not all kitchen accidents are innocent, and not all mistakes are unintended. Some spills are staged. Some heat is invited. Some burns don’t need ice.

From my Featured Photographs gallery—a rotating, uncurated selection of personal favorites from recent shoots and deep archives. I update it regularly as new images—and new obsessions—take hold.

See the full gallery:
https://www.secondfocus.com/index/G0000zYSGtyvq3Sg/I0000rgc_IUa0rOI


Black & White Photography

Of course I love black and white photography. Here is an example of one of my favorites. There is black, which I must say fits her very well. And there is some white there in that bottle. Perfect! And my favorite cookie model, Maria Bertrand. Wonderful Makeup and Hair Styling by the equally wonderful Natalie Lyle. Photographed with a Hasselblad digital camera system. Only the best!

Maria Bertrand, Milk And Cookies


Tonality As In Black And White

I keep seeing color digital camera photographs converted to black and white and wonder why I do not like them very much. I prefer the tonality created by actual black and white film and most of the black and white conversions I see miss the smoothness of the changes from the whites to the grays to the blacks. So I do prefer to shoot film for black and white or if I do a conversion from a digital created color photograph I try to create that tonality. And that is what I did here for example.

This is model Maria Rogers during an advertising photo shoot I did for Bodybuidling.com. Maria of course is nothing short of incredibly beautiful with a body that is just totally breathtaking. And a wonderful model that day for sure. This is actually an outtake but the ad itself ran in endless magazines for quite some time. I got a lot of e-mail from women who told me that they had torn this out and it was on their refrigerator for motivation. I also got a lot of e-mail from guys, sometimes the word motivation was in those too.

A side note you might find fun, Maria is wearing my underwear! Well not really mine and they were new. I try to carry extra new wardrobe pieces in a bag on all shoots. Odds and ends or some things I just happen to buy or that get sent to me by clothing and accessory companies. In this case we needed a matching thong. And I had one in just the right color. I would say it saved the day! What would you say?

Maria Rogers