The middle picture in the top row, is my best example of slow shutter speed. It shows the quick motion of Kara's legs hitting the soccer ball. The effect of having the camera set to a slow shutter of about 10 seconds is that the motion is slow by blurred movements. (The ball flying upward, and the leg moving up & down) The far right picture in the top row is my best example of fast shutter speed. Here my partner, Kara, is throwing a soccer ball towards me. The camera is set at a fast shutter speed of about 1/250 of a second. I composed this by framing the picture to get Kara, the ball, and part of the tree in the background involved in the set-up. The picture in the far left in the third row, is one of my most interesting pictures because it show both the blur of the motion the ball as well a faded image of the ball's eye where it stopped in air at one point during the shutter. The shutter speed for this picture was slow, about 8 seconds under the setting of "night with tripod." I was able to get this look within the shot by dangling the ball in front of the camera while the shutter was taking the picture, thus creating the the blurred/faded eye look.