Fast shutter speed
Fast shutter speed freezes the motion in your image. Fast shutter speed is 1/125 sec or faster. 1/1000 sec is super fast shutter speed. Fast shutter speed lets less light into your camera and will effect exposure making your images darker.
This is an example of a fast shutter speed, the photo is very precise and you can see a lot more detail than you would be able to see with a slow shutter speed.
medium shutter speed
This is example of medium shutter speed, some parts of the photo are blurred, but some are more focused
slow shutter speed
A slow shutter speed can help you illuminate a darker scene, as it allows more light through the lens. the slower your shutter speed, the more motion blur your camera will capture whilst shooting a fast moving object.
This photo was taken with a slow shutter speed, in the night with long exposure/slow shutter speed. the photographer would have had to have a steady camera
Eadweard Muybridge
Eadweard Muybridge is best known for his photographic studies of motion of humans and animals, although he was also a pioneer in landscape photography. To capture the first action shots of a galloping horse, he used multiple cameras in different positions. Their shutters were triggered by electricity, enabling a shutter speed of one thousandth of a second.
This is one of Eadweard Muybridges photos with a high shutter speed, showing a horse galloping. The camera has photographed the moment where all four of the horses legs are not touching the floor.
My own work.
In this photo we used a slow shutter speed in a dark room to capture the lights blurring to make those shapes.
This is another example of using slow shutter speed, me and my friend span round in circles to create this photo that looks like were not in one position