Hi All
I love taking photos but to be honest I'm not very good at it. I sometimes manage to take some decent shots, and some turn out acutally quite good....until I try and take them at night

I have a Panasonic TZ8 and dont really know enough about cameras to use anything other than the auto setting. Can anyone give me any tips on taking good photos at night? I would love to take a great shot of The Castle, WWoHP and fireworks, so any help or advise would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
For sharp, non-blurry night photos, the most important thing you'll need is a
tripod (or something similar, such as a GorillaPod). As long as your subject is
not moving, you will be able to get excellent night photos, even in Auto mode.
Your camera also has a couple settings that are specific for night and fireworks. There is a "
Night Scenery" setting, if you wanted to take pictures of just Cinderella's Castle at night. There's a "
Night Portrait" setting, if you wanted people in front of Cinderella's Castle at night. There's also a "
Fireworks" setting.
Instructions on how to use these Scene Modes are on page 61 of your camera's User's Manual. (
link)
The reason why you need a tripod for these night & fireworks shots is because your camera will select a long shutter speed (ie. the camera will keep the shutter open for 1 to several seconds). There is no way to hold the camera completely still for those several seconds. If you've tried, you've noticed that your pictures are pretty blurry. That's why you NEED to have a tripod (or GorillaPod) to hold your camera completely still for those several seconds.
Also, your subject needs to stay still for the duration of the photograph. Easy for the Castle to stay still for night photography. Hard for little boys to stay still.
Actually, I just read that your camera also has a "
Handheld Night Shot Mode", which means that it will attempt to take night photos *without* a tripod!

What this mode does is it will take 10 consecutive photos, try to combine them into 1 sharp night photo. It sounds amazing. I'd still recommend using a tripod and one of the other Scene Modes I mentioned above.
Hope that helps.