Colour Screens Explained
Colour screens turn any monitor, laptop, phone or tablet into a single flat field of colour you can control. Each colour does a different job. White is the brightest, most versatile option: a soft key light for webcams, a lightbox for tracing, and the fastest way to reveal dust or dead pixels. Black switches OLED and AMOLED pixels off to save power and is the best background for spotting backlight bleed. Red preserves night vision for astronomy and dark rooms. Green and blue are the standard chroma-key backdrops for green-screen and blue-screen video. Yellow, orange, purple and pink give warm, ambient or flattering light for mood lighting, streaming and selfies.
Every page opens in one click, runs fullscreen with no menus or watermarks, and works in any modern browser. Adjust brightness with the on-screen slider, pick any custom colour with the colour picker, or download a pure background image up to 8K for wallpapers, video editing and design work. Nothing installs and nothing is stored.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are these colour screens free?
Yes. Every colour screen is free, works in any modern browser on desktop, tablet and phone, and needs no sign-up or download.
How do I make a colour fill the whole screen?
Click the Go Full Screen button; press Esc or tap the screen to exit. While fullscreen you can adjust brightness with the slider.
Can a colour screen damage my monitor?
No. Displaying a solid colour is harmless on LCD and LED screens. On OLED panels, avoid leaving a static bright image at maximum brightness for many hours.
People Use Colour Screens For:
light for video calls · monitor cleaning · dead-pixel and stuck-pixel checks · green-screen / blue-screen video · night-vision-safe red light · OLED battery saving · ambient mood lighting · downloadable solid background images.