S1 E3: Isaac
(he/him)
Isaac’s Studio - Photographed by Niyah Shaheed (2025)“When I realized I was gay, I didn’t try to front or fake.
There’s a cost for that. There’s a cost that comes with being your authentic self.”
Images of Young Isaac - Courtesy of Isaac“I always knew - by the age of maybe eleven, twelve, I knew I was different.”
“Back in the day, if you saw gay people on television, it was comedy. They were stereotypical and they were there to be a joke - something to be laughed at, nothing to be taken seriously.”
“It’s hard because you’re in a place where everything tells you this is wrong. Your family says this is wrong. The church says this is wrong. The school - everything in your environment. It’s not like it is today.”
Left: Image of Isaac Courtesy of Isaac. Right: Isaac's Studio - Photographed by Niyah Shaheed (2025).“Ever since I was a little boy, I would sketch and daydream…
And in my high school yearbook I wrote that I wanted to be a fashion designer.”
“I’ve worked pretty much with every major network - CBS, NBC, Netflix, Marvel. I was one of the tailors on Black Panther, the first movie.”
Images of Isaac's Studio - Photographed by Niyah Shaheed (2025)“I think out of all the shows I’ve done, Black Panther was most rewarding because to me, that was part of history, that was a historical event. And my name was in the credits. So I go down in history with that.”
African American Lesbian Gay Alliance (1988). Courtesy of the Atlanta History Center“When I first moved to Atlanta, I was like a kid in a candy shop. Atlanta’s like the Black Mecca of the gay life… Just like the Black community we are diverse. And sometimes people have a tendency to try and put us in a box. We are an array. We are a variety of people.”
Left: “Dance floor of Traxx, 1999.” Middle: “Neon sign of the exterior of Loretta’s 1989.” Right: “Western Exterior of Backstreet facing Peachtree Street during Pride circa 2002.” Images Courtesy of The Atlanta LGBTQ+ Context Statement (2023)