Originally Posted by
Mike Buckley
As for achieving "accurate" exposure, always review the histogram after capturing a scene such as this one. If it is not ideally exposed, change the exposure, capture the scene again and recheck your new histogram. The exposure in this image is reasonably accurate but only so long as you are willing to accept the blown highlights.
As for using the lowest ISO value, the most effective way to do that is to use a tripod and to set the camera's ISO to its base ISO. If you have to accept the compromise of hand holding the camera in a low-light scene such as this one, shoot at an exposure setting that has a shutter speed that is fast enough to allow hand holding the camera and an aperture that is the largest setting that still allows everything in the scene to be in focus.
You could have used an aperture set at least to f/4 and probably f/2.8 and still kept everything in focus. Using f/4 would have been two more stops of light; f/2.8 would have been three more stops. If you had done that, you would have lowered your ISO to 3200 at f/4 and 1600 at f/2.8, an entire world of improvement when it comes to limiting noise.
You could have also used a shutter speed of about 1/60 and perhaps even 1/30 and would have still been able to hold your camera steady enough. That would have been more than one stop more light at 1/60 and more than two stops at 1/30. If doing that while using f/2.8, you would have then lowered your ISO to less than 800 at 1/60 and less than 400 at 1/30. It's possible and even likely that at ISO 800 or lower, there would have been absolutely no noise (though I admit that I have no personal experience using your camera model).
As for achieving sharp focus throughout, I would use single-point focusing on a scene like this one. I see no advantage to using more than one focus point. Having said that, your image seems to be sharp throughout, at least when viewed at this small size.
You mentioned that you don't see the noise on your camera's LCD. Be sure to magnify the captured image in the LCD. If noise is present, you'll see it when the image is magnified. Once you see that the noise is indeed present, consider all of the above, especially the possibility of using a larger aperture and slower shutter speed that would allow you to use a lower ISO value.