went to reece, the sky is not suitable, too much light pollution IMO.
Hi at0m87. On page 1 of this thread, George shot and post-processed a photo of Milky Way in Bishan Park, which is in the middle of our city state, i.e. surrounded by light pollution from nearby Ang Mo Kio / Bishan towns. Changi Beach is a darker location overall compared to Bishan Park and one can point their camera towards the sea direction which has lesser light pollution.
Here are some notes which may be useful to those trying to shoot Milky Way in Singapore (or any urban environment):
(1) On a clear enough night, point your camera where the Milky Way SHOULD be and shoot. For 99% of the locations in Singapore on those clear nights, you WILL NOT see the Milky Way with your naked eyes. So don't wait until your eyes can see it before you shoot and don't conclude prematurely a particular location is not dark enough or has too much light pollution blocking the Milky Way base on whether you can see it with your naked eyes.
In most cases, after shooting a long exposure shot, you may not even see Milky Way very clearly in your photos via the LCD screen of your camera. Don't assume you didn't capture it and delete them too early! Because ....
(2) Lots of post-processing is required to bring out / enhance the Milky Way as seen in final shots. Prepare to make the effort to learn different types of post-processing techniques. For a start, I suggest learning the Exposure To The Right (ETTR) techniques used by local professional photographer Justin Ng. Visit his website and read his tutorials of post-processing Milky Way shots. For example, this one:
http://www.justinngphoto.com/2014/0...ky-way-from-light-polluted-skies-of-singapore.
Then, spend more time to do research and experiment on other techniques of post-processing astrophotographs. In time, you will develop your own style/workflow/preference base on the final effect you prefer to see.
(3) Don't confuse clarity of sky on a particular night with local light pollution. These are 2 separate issues when evaluating a particular site in terms of suitability of shooting Milky Way (and stargazing for that matter). So don't conclude too early base on only 1 single recce trip unless the sky happens to be very clear on that one particular recce night.
It's Chinese New Year period now which means it's new Moon period. Can start practising capturing the thickest/brightest part of Milky Way (between Sagittarius and Scorpius) during the early morning hours around 5:30am these days. Milky Way is still relatively low near the horizon compared to a few months later. But if these early morning skies are clear enough, there may be opportunities to create interesting compositions with objects near the horizon and Milky Way just above them.
Then by the time the summer Milky Way is much higher up in the sky a few months later, you will be well prepared and have more confidence of capturing the required data to be post processed later.
Wishing all of you good luck and a very Happy New Year!!