Wayne Eastep

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Sample of my photographic style { 32 images } Created 28 Oct 2010

Portfolio collection of images illustrating the style of Wayne Eastep's photography.
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  • A visitor to the great pyramid at Giza in Egypt
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  • The entrance to a sacred area within the complex at Al-Hijr.  The archeological site of Al-Hijr (Madain Saleh) is the first UNESCO World Heritage Site in Saudi Arabia.  It was a major center of the Nabataen civilization.  It is the largest Nabataen site south of Petra in Jordan.  It bears testimony to the Nabataen civilization between the 2nd and 3rd centuries BC and pre-Islamic period in the 1st century AD.
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  • Shakbak-Ata Zoroastrian Temple, Kazakhstan
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  • Hotel Balconies, San Antonio, Texas.
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  • View from Hotel Raquel, Old Havana, Cuba
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  • Hurricane Opal, hotel swimming pool, Destin, Florida
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  • Pipeline transporting liquid natural gas to shipping port in Qatar.
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  • Pennsylvania (Union) Station, Pittsburgh, PA
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  • Couple and their dog walking in the Botanical Gardens, Edinburgh, Scotland
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  • Curing CT Shade, Windsor, CT
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  • Takigi O-Noh is a traditional musical drama performed  on the open-air stage built on the lawn of Kofukuji Temple, a World Heritage Site.  Takigi O-Noh signifies "a Noh traditional Musical theater drama performed at a banquet held around a bonfire'.     This Bonfire Noh is believed to have orginated in at Kofukuji Temple in 869. The Noh consists mainly of songs and dance, the traditional drama is performed by spoken lines.
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  • Ryoanji Zen Temple, Kyoto, Japan
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  • Railroad signalman in Grand Trunk Railroad train yard - HOK
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  • Bedouin men in Arabian sandstorm
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  • Wild Steppe horses, southern Kazakhstan
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  • Camel Herder on a Steppe horse, Kazakhstan
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  • Abdulkhak Turlybayev is known as 'The Eagle Man' because of his mastery of these magnificent creatures.  Kazakhs call men like Mr. Turlybayev 'Qusbegi,' or 'Lord of the Birds.'  Watching him work with his eagle quickly made me understand that what he has and feels transcends 'skill' - it rises to 'relationship.'  Kazakhs revere the golden eagle in part because they fly so high and close to the sun.  Pilots have reported seein them as high as 20,000 feet.
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  • Turlybayev Abulkhak, Master hunter with Golden Eagles,
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  • Souwad, Bedouin market, El Fayoum Oasis, Egypt
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  • Master Cigar maker, Gloria Cubano, Honduras
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  • Cyrano de Bergerac
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  • Approaching storm at sunset along a canal in the Florida Everglades.
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  • Sunflowers in NE Kazakhstan, Ust-Kamenogorsk region.
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  • Feather Grasses, like these near Sergeyevka, have grown for millennia only in the thin topsoil of the Steppes, some varieties are now scarce or endangered species.  The Steppes were covered in this ideal pasturage prior to the Soviet's misguided Virgin Land Reclamation policy of the 1950s under which nearly 25 million hectares (about 62 million acres) of northern Steppes were plowed up to plant wheat.
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  • Tulips covered with spring snow, Almaty
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  • Kazakhstan is dotted with 48,000 lakes, many small like this mirror-surfaced one at Ush-Konyr near Fabrichny
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  • Sand dune at Taweelah, Saudi Arabia.
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  • Professor Rontgen Parrot Tuip
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  • The sunflower an annual plant is native to the Americas. The flower petals within the sunflower's cluster are always in a spiral pattern.  Generally, each floret is oriented toward the next by appropximately the golden angle, 137.5 degrees, producing a pattern of interconnecting spirals, where the number of left spirals and the number of right spirals are successive Fibonacci numbers.  This pattern produces the most efficient packing of seeds within the flower head.
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  • White Rose
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