[1] Easton was articled to George Mitchell of Aberdeen in 1905 and studied at Robert Gordon's Technical College.
He spent time in France in 1912 after which he moved to London where he studied at University College School of Architecture.
At the same time he was an assistant with Granville Edward Stewart Streatfeild, Collcutt & Hamp, Raymond Unwin, and Wimperis & Simpson.
[1] Easton was the designer of Aberconway House at 38 South Street, Mayfair, London, and Loughton tube station, Essex, a grade II listed building.
[2][3] He also designed the Lawrence Hall of the Royal Horticultural Society, the British Pavilion at the 1939 World's Fair,[4] and the Research Building of the Metropolitan Water Board at New River Head (1938).