The small Ponte delle Sirenette (Bridge of Mermaids) by Italian engineer Francesco Tettamanzi was inaugurated on June 23rd in 1842 on the Naviglio della Martesana (Martesan Canal) on the San Damiano road (now called via Visconti di Modrone) in Milano (map). It was moved to the heart of Parco Sempione in 1930 as part of a larger preservation effort. map

Originally installed as a bridge across the canal, the Ponte delle Sirenette was part of the city life until it was moved into the park. It features in literature and novels – one can see how it could lend itself to intrigue, mystery and romance in its original location.
In the new location, just over a mile from the original location, the Bridge of Mermaids is under a canopy of trees and spans a narrow section of lake inside the park. It is a beautiful setting for the bridge and its four mermaid statues, known as the Ghislini Sisters. After 170 years of watching life in Milano, they must have some stories to tell.
With a flair for romance and an appreciation of bygone times, this scene was observed on the Bridge in recent times.

See more photos and video on the Ponte delle Sirenette page.










Last year’s Animal Planet special on mermaids, called Mermaids: The Body Found, was immensely popular, and resulted in a lot of people asking themselves – and others – whether mermaids are real. It actually was asked so often that the US government felt compelled to issue a 


Mermaids became an important pastime in my little daughter’s life, not unlike her mother; she had quite the penchant for the story, “The Little Mermaid”. However, Disney made the popular classic into a cartoon movie, and commercialism being what it is, came out with dolls, figurines, and all kinds of memorabilia that circled the globe making “Ariel”, an iconic figure in mainstream American culture.
My photographs were noticed by a mermaid tail vendor, Jerilyn Winstead, an entrepreneurial guru that had started her own business a few years prior to our actual meeting. Her company, Aquatails, is a mermaid tail, and accessories based business that designs tails for all ages, not just children. Her website wanted to feature my work, so I agreed, and pretty soon I was photographing for Aquatails as a regular team member. I purchased many of the tails, and began looking for models to wear new tail designs that Jerilyn had designed.
I met other mermaid photographers that had their own business models, and soon devised my own, “







