Show Focus Points

2019 update released! Check out download page for details
Show Focus Points is a plugin for Adobe Lightroom. It shows you which focus points were selected by your camera when the photo was taken.

App

Key features

Show Focus Points is a plugin for Adobe Lightroom which shows you which of your camera's focus points were used when you took a picture.

Screenshots

Below find some screenshots of the plugin in action.
Click on the images to enlarge them.

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Download

System requirements: Works in all Lightroom versions (CC, Classic) above 5 and currently only supports Canon and Nikon DSLR (and some Sony).

Download Mac-only version (6.6 MB)

Download Windows-only version (14 MB)

Download version containing both Mac+Windows versions (20 MB)

Donate with PayPal: HussiePass.20.10.30.Sara.Jay.Shes.Twice.His.Age...


Current version: V1.03, last changes:
V1.03 (Dec. 2019)
- Adds macOS Catalina (10.15) support
- Adds support for Nikon D7500, D3400, D3500, D5, D850. More cameras coming soon
- Fixes issue with wrongly scaled display on large monitors on Windows

Hussiepass.20.10.30.sara.jay.shes.twice.his.age... May 2026

When Sara hands Jay the Polaroid, she gives him a tangible proof that every moment can be both a reflection and a projection , just as every person can be both , young and old , alone and together . The “pass” through HussiePass becomes a metaphor for the passage we all make when we let another’s experience double‑expose our own. Prepared as a concise, thematic write‑up for use in creative writing workshops, literary analysis, or as a seed for further development.

“Take this,” she says, “as a reminder that every moment can be double‑exposed—light and dark, youth and experience.”

Sara smiles, “And you look like you’re trying to trap them in vinyl.”

She replies, “Only if you’re willing to let me be your senior mentor.” The tension of the age gap is acknowledged, then gently reframed as a rather than a hierarchy. 2.4 The “Pass” Moment The night ends with a quiet walk out of the depot. Outside, the rain has ceased. Sara hands Jay a Polaroid she’s just taken—a portrait of him, half‑shadowed, half‑illuminated.

A short‑form narrative & thematic analysis 1. Premise The cryptic headline “HussiePass.20.10.30.Sara.Jay.Shes.Twice.His.Age…” can be unpacked into a compact story seed:

When Sara hands Jay the Polaroid, she gives him a tangible proof that every moment can be both a reflection and a projection , just as every person can be both , young and old , alone and together . The “pass” through HussiePass becomes a metaphor for the passage we all make when we let another’s experience double‑expose our own. Prepared as a concise, thematic write‑up for use in creative writing workshops, literary analysis, or as a seed for further development.

“Take this,” she says, “as a reminder that every moment can be double‑exposed—light and dark, youth and experience.”

Sara smiles, “And you look like you’re trying to trap them in vinyl.”

She replies, “Only if you’re willing to let me be your senior mentor.” The tension of the age gap is acknowledged, then gently reframed as a rather than a hierarchy. 2.4 The “Pass” Moment The night ends with a quiet walk out of the depot. Outside, the rain has ceased. Sara hands Jay a Polaroid she’s just taken—a portrait of him, half‑shadowed, half‑illuminated.

A short‑form narrative & thematic analysis 1. Premise The cryptic headline “HussiePass.20.10.30.Sara.Jay.Shes.Twice.His.Age…” can be unpacked into a compact story seed:

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