Here's the two-slit "diffraction" pattern from a previous post:
If you close or block one slit, you would see (only) the pattern indicated by the dashed line, but with lower overall intensity because only half as much light enters one slit versus two slits. The small-scale variations (solid line) disappear.
If you gradually reduce the widths of the two slits, while keeping them the same distance apart (center-to-center), the pattern indicated by the dashed line (envelope) spreads out while the small-scale variations maintain the same width. Eventually the central maximum of the envelope "fills the field of view" so to speak, and the amplitude of the small-scale variations is nearly constant. The overall amplitude of the pattern decreases because there is less light going through the slits.
If you move the slits further apart, while keeping them the same width, the small-scale variations (solid line) become narrower, but the dashed-line envelope remains the same. If you move the slits closer together, the small-scale variations become wider, but again the envelope remains the same. When the two slits get close enough to merge, you end up with a single-slit pattern.