Description I took about 10 shots from the same spot over the course of 15 minutes then left- because my time and your time is too valuable :) Sorry if the photo is too artsy.
As the others have said: Lowest ISO possible is the best. Also if you've got access to a tripod or hard surface you can rest your camera on, use the lowest ISO you can and lower the shutter speed until the photo is properly exposed.
You may be able to do a light painting (sorta) with a 3200 and 1/60 but I wouldn't ever recommend it.
Few seconds, lowest possible ISO, also save RAW file. You'll need either a tripod for experimenting angles or use the ground/stable objects if you don't have one and the car isn't gonna move. I'm assuming this photo was probably using the ground which is my favorite.
@ALB15 They lens and such don't really matter that much for these types of shots. These are long exposures, get a tripod, put the shutter speed to a couple of seconds (I go for 20-30) and boom. Make sure your ISO isn't jacked up all the way. And don't use flash, most of the time it ruins the picture and is annoying. Just jack up your ISO a bit and get a slower shutter speed.
What kind of camera and lens did you use to do this? The only way I can do night shots is with flash on. What kind of setting (on a Canon T5, if you know) do you use to get a good night shot without flash?
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24-105mm
Forget the f stop sorry
6 seconds
iso 100