This is probably the best shot I have of a marine propeller, where you can get a better idea of the shape:

The model is made of brass, having a piece of bronze that size as stock would be a little over indulgent.
Noel touches on an interesting point, going astern. Propellers tend to be designed for the itinerary they are expected to be on. Long lengths of time at sea under fairly consistent conditions require a particular design that is comparatively efficient under those conditions but which is then less efficient when manoeuvring or going slow. Ships that require extreme manoeuvring capabilities, such as tugs, ferries and anchor handlers use propeller designs that give the best torque and response but tend to be far less efficient when full speed running. All propeller design is a compromise to best fit an infinitely variable set of conditions.
The most interesting, and frequently most misquoted are, what are commonly known as, variable pitch propellers. However, as I’ve mentioned above, all propellers are variable pitch. What is really being referred to are controllable pitch propellers. These are usually found on ships that require very fast response and manoeuvrability but at the expense of efficiency. These are nearly always found on tugs, anchor handlers etc. although when I first went to sea on small North Atlantic container ships they were fitted with Controllable Pitch Propellers, or CPPs, to enable fast ahead and astern movements to break the ice when going up the St Lawrence in winter. That was in the days when fuel efficiency deep sea wasn’t as significant as it become a few years later.
As for the pictures, the first shot from astern above is the Disney Wonder, they are around 20 tons of single cast bronze each and the single propeller is from the Disney Dream. This one is of interest because it is fabricated not a single casting. The blades are all bolted to the hub with stretched studs from inside. A man can comfortably sit inside the hub while he spends all day slowly stretching the studs. While basically fixed there is an ability to adjust the pitch by a couple of degrees either way to enable the best possible deep sea efficiency. That propeller is a bronze hub and stainless steel blades and end cap. Big advantage of course is that a damaged blade can be replaced, yes, even with the ship in the water.