November 6th, 2019
https://fineartamerica.com/featured/2381-mid-century-modern-stanbridge-estate-palm-springs-amyn-nasser.html
Stanbridge Estate Mid-Century Modern Luxury Home. Real Estate in Palm Springs, a capsule of midcentury design with astonishing views of mountains and valleys.
Featured La Storia - Maison De Shu Shu - Fashion Architecture Editorial - Joelle Stanbridge, Steve Stanbridge - Photographed in Palm Springs, California. PIM 20 - Prestige International.
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Copyright ©Amyn Nasser Studios
October 24th, 2019
FEATURED Big Sur California Pacific Coast Road Trip 0577
Road Trip along California Pacific Coast Highway through Cambria, Big Sur, Carmel, Monterey and all the beautiful places up to San Francisco.
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Copyright ©Amyn Nasser Studios
FEATURED YOUR VERY BEST PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY
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October 24th, 2019
Road Trip along California Pacific Coast Highway through Cambria, Big Sur, Carmel, Monterey and all the beautiful places up to San Francisco.
Top Artist.
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Copyright ©Amyn Nasser Studios
FEATURED ART FOREVER COLLECTOR GALLERY
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October 24th, 2019
Wild Cactus in the Super Bloom season in Joshua Tree on a sunny spring day. We were travelling through only to be presented with a massive palette of the color of wildflowers in Yellow, Violet and Gold, and cactus in lush green, and photographed this during the super bloom season where there were so many flowers blooming. It was a lovely day and the light was just right and crisp and clear. The Cacti and wildflowers had an air of mystery and style! Breathtaking!
Gear: Nikon D800 with NIKKOR lenses and Gitzo - Manfrotto tripods.
A Top Collected Artist. No Watermark on Art or Licensed Image. No Unauthorized or Creative Commons Use Permitted. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright ©Amyn Nasser Studios
FEATURED NEW FAA UPLOADS GALLERY
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October 24th, 2019
FEATURED IN THE FOLLOWING GALLERIES
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FEATURED NO PLACE LIKE HOME GALLERY
FEATURED ART SUBMISSIONS TO PKA GALLERY
FEATURED ART FOREVER GALLERY
FEATURED NO PLACE LIKE HOME GALLERY
FEATURED ART SUBMISSIONS TO PKA GALLERY
FEATURED ART FOREVER GALLERY
FEATURED NO PLACE LIKE HOME GALLERY
Road Trip along California Pacific Coast Highway through Cambria, Big Sur, Carmel, Monterey and all the beautiful places up to San Francisco.
May 27th, 2019
Maasai tribesman holding a goat outside his hut home in the grasslands of Ngorongoro Conservation Area in Tanzania Africa.
The Maasai (Kenyan English:[maˈsaːɪ]) are a Nilotic ethnic group inhabiting southern Kenya and northern Tanzania. They are among the best known local populations due to their residence near the many game parks of the African Great Lakes, and their distinctive customs and dress. The Maasai speak the Maa language (ɔl Maa), a member of the Nilo-Saharan family that is related to Dinkaand Nuer. They are also educated in the official languages of Kenya and Tanzania, Swahili and English.
Ngorongoro Conservation Area - Ngorongoro Crater Tanzania.
For thousands of years a succession of cattle herding people moved into the Area, lived here for time, and then moved on, sometimes forced out by other tribes.
About 200 years ago the Maasai arrived and have since colonized the Area in substantial numbers, their traditional way of life allowing them to live in harmony with the wildlife and the environment. Today there are some 42,200 Maasai pastoralists living in the NCA with their cattle, donkeys, goats and sheep. During the rains they move out on to the open plains; in the dry season they move into the adjacent woodlands and mountain slopes. The Maasai are allowed to take their animals into the Crater for water and grazing, but not to live or cultivate there. Elsewhere in the NCA they have the right to roam freely.
The Datoga, Nilo-Hamitic-speaking pastoralists, who arrived more than 300 years ago and were subsequently forced out of the Serengeti-Ngorongoro area by the Maasai, today they live just outside the NCA, in the Lake Eyasi basin and beyond.
Source: http://www.ngorongorocrater.org/people.html
No Watermark on Art or Licensed Image. No Unauthorized or Creative Commons Use Permitted. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright ©Amyn Nasser Studios
FEATURED PHOTOGRAPH:
New FAA Curated Gallery on 03/29/2019
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No Place Like Home Curated Gallery on 03/15/2019
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Out Of The Ordinary Curated Gallery on 03/12/2019
FEATURED PHOTO IN Contemporary GALLERY 04/05/2019
FEATURED PHOTO IN Art Submissions To PKA 03/31/2019
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May 6th, 2019
FEATURED PHOTO IN CURATED GALLERY Art for Ever Gallery
FEATURED PHOTO IN CURATED GALLERY Pretty in Pink Blue Gallery
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Road Trip along California Pacific Coast Highway thru Cambria, Big Sur, Carmel, Monteray and all the beautiful places up to San Francisco.
Top Artist
No Watermark on Art or Licensed Image. No Unauthorized or Creative Commons Use Permitted. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright ©Amyn Nasser Studios
March 30th, 2019
Sunset view of residential living in English Bay Vancouver British Columbia Canada on a warm summer night.
No Watermark on Art or Licensed Image. No Unauthorized or Creative Commons Use Permitted. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright ©Amyn Nasser Studios
FEATURED PHOTOGRAPHY:
Pin Me - Daily Curated Gallery on 03/08/2019
March 30th, 2019
Smiling happy young Masai child at the village Masaii school in the grasslands of Ngorongoro Conservation Area near Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania
FEATURED PHOTOGRAPH:
New FAA Curated Gallery on 03/20/2019
FEATURED PHOTOGRAPH:
No Place Like Home Curated Gallery on 03/10/2019
FEATURED PHOTOGRAPH:
Pin Me - Daily Curated Gallery on 03/08/2019
The Maasai (Kenyan English:[maˈsaːɪ]) are a Nilotic ethnic group inhabiting southern Kenya and northern Tanzania. They are among the best known local populations due to their residence near the many game parks of the African Great Lakes, and their distinctive customs and dress. The Maasai speak the Maa language (ɔl Maa), a member of the Nilo-Saharan family that is related to Dinkaand Nuer. They are also educated in the official languages of Kenya and Tanzania, Swahili and English.
Ngorongoro Conservation Area - Ngorongoro Crater Tanzania.
For thousands of years a succession of cattle herding people moved into the Area, lived here for time, and then moved on, sometimes forced out by other tribes.
About 200 years ago the Maasai arrived and have since colonized the Area in substantial numbers, their traditional way of life allowing them to live in harmony with the wildlife and the environment. Today there are some 42,200 Maasai pastoralists living in the NCA with their cattle, donkeys, goats and sheep. During the rains they move out on to the open plains; in the dry season they move into the adjacent woodlands and mountain slopes. The Maasai are allowed to take their animals into the Crater for water and grazing, but not to live or cultivate there. Elsewhere in the NCA they have the right to roam freely.
The Datoga, Nilo-Hamitic-speaking pastoralists, who arrived more than 300 years ago and were subsequently forced out of the Serengeti-Ngorongoro area by the Maasai, today they live just outside the NCA, in the Lake Eyasi basin and beyond.
Source: http://www.ngorongorocrater.org/people.html
No Watermark on Art or Licensed Image. No Unauthorized or Creative Commons Use Permitted. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright ©Amyn Nasser Studios
March 30th, 2019
DescriptionMaasai tribesman holding a goat outside his hut home in the grasslands of Ngorongoro Conservation Area in Tanzania Africa.
FEATURED PHOTOGRAPH:
New FAA Curated Gallery on 03/29/2019
FEATURED PHOTOGRAPH:
No Place Like Home Curated Gallery on 03/15/2019
FEATURED PHOTOGRAPH:
Out Of The Ordinary Curated Gallery on 03/12/2019
The Maasai (Kenyan English:[maˈsaːɪ]) are a Nilotic ethnic group inhabiting southern Kenya and northern Tanzania. They are among the best known local populations due to their residence near the many game parks of the African Great Lakes, and their distinctive customs and dress. The Maasai speak the Maa language (ɔl Maa), a member of the Nilo-Saharan family that is related to Dinkaand Nuer. They are also educated in the official languages of Kenya and Tanzania, Swahili and English.
Ngorongoro Conservation Area - Ngorongoro Crater Tanzania.
For thousands of years a succession of cattle herding people moved into the Area, lived here for time, and then moved on, sometimes forced out by other tribes.
About 200 years ago the Maasai arrived and have since colonized the Area in substantial numbers, their traditional way of life allowing them to live in harmony with the wildlife and the environment. Today there are some 42,200 Maasai pastoralists living in the NCA with their cattle, donkeys, goats and sheep. During the rains they move out on to the open plains; in the dry season they move into the adjacent woodlands and mountain slopes. The Maasai are allowed to take their animals into the Crater for water and grazing, but not to live or cultivate there. Elsewhere in the NCA they have the right to roam freely.
The Datoga, Nilo-Hamitic-speaking pastoralists, who arrived more than 300 years ago and were subsequently forced out of the Serengeti-Ngorongoro area by the Maasai, today they live just outside the NCA, in the Lake Eyasi basin and beyond.
Source: http://www.ngorongorocrater.org/people.html
No Watermark on Art or Licensed Image. No Unauthorized or Creative Commons Use Permitted. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright ©Amyn Nasser Studios