Tripod! :mrgreen: Or just use any old flat spot that you can find.
Click the photo to get to my "Singpore at Night" album. These are all from a business trip a few years ago, all with my old Sony DSC-P100 (5MP). This was the last P&S I owned before upgrading to a DSLR.
That photo was taken right from my hotel room. There was a metal beam running across my window which turned out to be the perfect ledge to park my camera on for all sorts of great night time skyline photos. Walking around the city at night, I just used any stable flat spot I could find to do good long exposure photos.
- Narrow little edges of railing surrounding the water of the Boat Quay
- flat tops of street signs
- propped up on a plate at dinner with a colleague
- road side utility boxes or signal control boxes
- on top of a dumpster, lol
No stinking tripod needed if you're a little creative.
What you want to do is lock the camera in low sensitivity mode for a nice clean image and then make sure the flash is off also. That'll give a long exposure. Most digital point and shoots have a night scene "dummy" mode that does the same thing. If you Google I'm sure you can probably find a manual or some sort of guide for the camera. The other trick is to set the exposure delay mode, like if you set the camera down or have it on a tripod and want to be able to jump in your own photo. What this does for night shots is ensure that any vibrations or oscillations from hitting the shutter release have dampened out before it actually starts taking the photo. Usually you'll get blurred shots at night unless you do that, so you'll need to figure that out too. On my DSC-P100, the Night Scene "dummy" mode wasn't smart enough to set the exposure delay, so I had to do that manually.
I walked all around Singapore at night watching other idiots try to get photos using their P&S in full auto mode with the flash and then scratching their head at the completely dark photos. Don't be one of
THEM.

I showed these to some of my Singaporean native colleagues and they had no idea how beautiful their own city/country could be at night. Beautiful place (very clean, lol), and a very fascinating place to go.