
Photo 1
I used a fast shutter speed (1/4000) to capture cars driving on the highway. The quick shutter froze the motion so the vehicles look sharp instead of blurred. This shows how fast shutter speed is useful for photographing moving subjects

Photo 2
I used a slower shutter speed (1/125) to photograph a moving car. The background appears blurred, while the car stays sharp, showing motion blur. This demonstrates how slow shutter speed captures the sense of movement in fast-moving subjects.

Photo 3
The flower is great example wide aperture. The brightness yellow sticks out for the front flower but then blurs the background in the other.

Photo 4
This picture is my backyard. The narrow aperture allows for the green leaves to pop along with picking up the dark shadow of the shade.

Photo 5
I used high ISO setting ( ISO 12,800) to capture books in a darker area. The higher ISO made the image bright enough to see, but it also added noticeable grain and noise. This shoes the trade-off of using high ISO in low light: more brightness but lower image quality.

Photo 6
I used a low ISO setting (ISO 100) to photograph my dog in bright light. The image looks clear and sharp with very little noise or grain. This shows how low ISO gives better image quality when there I plenty of light
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