In P3 of fast shutter speeds, the shutter speed was about 1/1000 of a second. i'm not too sure what the ISO and WB was because i was using someone else's camera, but if i were to make guess they were both on auto. I Froze the dice dropping from out of frame. the different shapes the falling dice make are what give the image interest. In P2 of Slow shutter speeds, the shutter speed was about /8th of a second. again, i'm not too sure what the settings where but my best guess was that they were default. the POV of the photo is very close up so we can see the movement that the dice make bouncing off the surface. The high contrast between the blacks and whites of the dice make this a very strong photo.
painting with light
Picture 3: I was using a 6 second shutter speed when i was taking this picture. The light source was string lights being swung by one of my classmates. i was behind him so i could capture his silhouette in front of the moving lights. The way i view the picture is the silhouette is releasing these lights from himself, the lights could be interpreted as emotions or feelings being released. Also it looks like Star Trek "Beam me up Scotty!"
Color Correction practice
Aperture
In picture 5, the door lock (in focus) i used f/5.6 with ISO: 800 with a 1/100 sec shutter speed. In picture 4, the brick wall & Faye, I used a f/10.2 with ISO:800 with a 1/125 sec shutter speed I believe Picture 5 is better because there is a focus point to directly look at in the photo, rather than everything in focus and not a definitive thing to look at. you would want to use a shallow depth of field to have one thing directly in focus at one time. And you would want to use a large depth of field when you are taking a shot with multiple objects or subjects so you would be able to get everything in focus.