White Screen

Fullscreen color, light, and download

Colors

Custom color

Brightness (zoom lighting)

Image size for download

× px

Why use a white screen or solid-color fullscreen?

A single-color fullscreen is one of the simplest utilities you can keep bookmarked on any computer. Whether you need a clean white screen for tracing artwork, a bright field of color to bounce light onto a subject, or a neutral backdrop to inspect your monitor for dead pixels and uneven backlighting, filling the entire display with one tone removes distractions and gives predictable, consistent illumination.

Older workarounds—opening a blank document, stretching an image, or hunting through video players—are slow and often leave menus or scrollbars visible. A dedicated online tool avoids that friction: you can jump to fullscreen so the swatch covers every pixel, fine-tune the shade with a hex value, compare presets quickly, and ease brightness when a full blast of white feels harsh during late-night sessions.

Photographers sometimes use colored screens as improvised fill light; designers use them to judge contrast on different hues; technicians use uniform fields to spot stuck subpixels or color banding. Exporting a PNG at your native resolution is useful when you need the same flat color inside another app or on a device that cannot open this page.

Shortcuts for fullscreen and hiding the panel let you switch to color-only mode when you need maximum screen space. Everything runs in your browser without a heavy install, so the workflow stays light on laptops, classroom projectors, or shared studio machines—whether you are calibrating, learning, or simply need a reliable solid color monitor fill.

Because no accounts or plugins are required, you can open the page whenever you want a dependable, full-screen wash of color—whether you are cleaning a display, teaching a workshop, testing a projector in a bright room, or comparing print whites to what you see on glass.