Motion Blur and Motion Freeze
This is a photo demonstrating motion blur taken by a camera simulator website. Motion blur occurs when your aperture is high, but your shutter speed is slow, so the camera captures the movement from when light is hitting the film. To do this in the camera simulator, I used the shutter priority option, and made my shutter speed 1/60 of a second, so that the movement of the pinwheel would be captured.
This next image is an example of motion freeze. To have no motion at all in your photo, you have to have a fast shutter speed, so that no motion can be captured when the light hits your film. Aperture is not really an issue here as the website I used had me working on the shutter priority option. This particular photo has a speed of 1/1000 of a second, which is a very fast shutter speed to shoot at.
This is a photo demonstrating motion blur taken by a camera simulator website. Motion blur occurs when your aperture is high, but your shutter speed is slow, so the camera captures the movement from when light is hitting the film. To do this in the camera simulator, I used the shutter priority option, and made my shutter speed 1/60 of a second, so that the movement of the pinwheel would be captured.
Greater Depth and Shallow Depth
For these two photos, I used the aperture priority setting, so I could only increase or decrease the aperture, and the shutter speed would adjust on its own. This shot is of a greater depth of field, where the background is in focus, but the subject is not. To get a great depth of field, you need to increase your aperture by a lot, in order to not let much light hit. I achieved this by increasing my aperture all the way to f/22, which is the highest you can go on this website.
This photo demonstrates shallow depth of field, which is where the subject is in focus, but the background is not in focus. To do this, I decreased my aperture, and I decreased it to f/2.8, so that a lot of light could hit the "film," creating this shot.
For these two photos, I used the aperture priority setting, so I could only increase or decrease the aperture, and the shutter speed would adjust on its own. This shot is of a greater depth of field, where the background is in focus, but the subject is not. To get a great depth of field, you need to increase your aperture by a lot, in order to not let much light hit. I achieved this by increasing my aperture all the way to f/22, which is the highest you can go on this website.