Author Archives: Wayne Eastep



Visit my online gallery/store to see this image at various sizes in a variety of rooms. eastepphotography.artstorefronts.com
Fiber Cloud

The juxtaposition of an industrial image within a room creates a unique quality of energy and strong graphics. There is an unexpected surprise seeing this kind of subject displayed in a room in the house.

LPG pipeline in the desert of Qatar.

LPG pipeline at night in the desert, Qatar.
To see these images within a room and to size them to scale visit my online gallery/Store: eastepphotography.artstorefronts.com
Industrial Art


To see this image in other rooms and in your own room using Augmented Reality (AR) visit my online site: www.eastepphotography.artstorefronts.com
Fine art print in the bathroom
Industry is built using engineering design. I’ve always appreciated the elegance of design be it in fine art drawings, fashion, or industrial design. Often the clearer the concept the cleaner the design. Long ago the Shakers and Danish designers illustrated that truth.
This image is a sonar mapping image of the floor of the Gulf of Mexico identifying were there are voids in the earth, where there is crude oil and where there is natural gas.
Once again when we turn our attention to nature we often see elegant design and beauty.


Sonar Map, Gulf of Mexico.
To see this image in various sizes and frames and to buy visit my online store: eastepphotography.artstorefronts.com
Unexpected Art/Industry
Industry an unexpected source of art


Approaching storm at sunset in Sarasota, Florida.
To view more images in the collection visit: https://www.WayneEastep.com
Approaching Storm
Approaching Strom, Sarasota, Florida

Observed Moments
I was walking down fifth avenue and saw this image, paused turned back and asked the person if it would be ok to make an image of their shoes. They looked a little puzzled, but said, ok. After making the image I showed it to them and they said, “wow very cool, I had no idea”.
One of the great satisfactions of photography is being able to make an image of those fleeting moments that we come upon every day.
Observed Moments, No. 2

I’ve always thought of myself as an observer. As such photography became the means by which I could communicate what I saw.
Life observed, a rainy Sunday




While living in New York City I often made a study of the twin towers of the World Trade Center. Living in midtown I would look downtown and see the towers. Moving around the city and coming up from the subway I would look for the towers giving me an immediate sense of where I was in the city. They became an orientation a defining feature of the cityscape.
Over the years I photographed a variety of assignments there; Buckminster Fuller giving a lecture, and ad for Windows on the World, corporate marketing for UPS, etc. As I moved around the city I would observe the towers making images of them in relationship to the various neighborhoods. Like many New Yorkers I oriented physically and psychologically with the twin towers. That sense remains with me, I think it always will.
Twin Towers of the World Trade Center, Orientation and Relationship

Technological limitations with the iPhone11Pro camera results in an opportunity to discover new expressions in an image. This image for example was made after dusk in low light. Phone cameras have a challenge recording images in low light conditions. This image of the dingy creates a mood that an exacting image made with my high end Nikon would not. The pixels are breaking up, the colors degraded, a technical issue called “noise” and there is a loss of sharpness. The result is that the image takes on a painterly look and creates a feeling that is moody and ambiguous.
Seeing into the mood of the moment
Low light image of a boat on Sarasota bay with the iPhone11Pro camera.
