Select Start , then enter settings in the search box. Select Settings  > System  > Display  > Night light.

If your night light toggle is grayed out, you may need to update your display driver. See Update drivers manually in Windows.

Select Start  > Settings  > System > Display > Night light settings. If your night light toggle above the link is grayed out, you may need to update your display driver. See Update drivers in Windows 10.


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The Custom mode gives you options between Light and Dark. You can choose an accent color, or have Windows select one (the accent color will provide a contrast with, or match, your wallpaper and Windows color). This option is for the Start menu, taskbar, and action center. You can also show an accent color for window title bars (the horizontal bar at the top of a window) and borders. You can play around with the colors and modes to see which ones work best for you.

The Custom mode gives you options between Light and Dark. You can choose an accent color, or have Windows select one (the accent color will provide a contrast with, or match, your wallpaper and Windows color). This option is for the Start menu, taskbar, and action center. You can also show an accent color for window title bars (the horizontal bar at the top of a window) and borders. You can play around with the colors and modes to see which ones work best for you.

To manually select an accent color, choose one under Recent colors or Windows colors, or select Custom color for an even more detailed option. Or select the Automatically pick an accent color from my background box to have Windows select the color. The accent color you choose will help offset and complement the Light mode.

To manually select an accent color, choose one under Recent colors or Windows colors, or select Custom color for an even more detailed option. Or select the Automatically pick an accent color from my background box to have Windows select the color. The accent color will help offset and complement the Dark mode.

To manually select an accent color, choose one under Recent colors or Windows colors, or select Custom color for an even more detailed option. Or select the Automatically pick an accent color from my background box to have Windows select the color. The accent color will help offset and complement the Custom mode.

Regardless of your Dark Mode settings, your document will print with the light mode page color. Also, your Dark Mode settings do not impact your collaborators, and Word will respect individual view preferences. To preview your document for printing and sharing, use the Switch Modes button to change the page background to light.

Regardless of your Dark Mode settings, your document will print with the light mode page color. Also, your Dark Mode settings do not impact your collaborators, and Word will respect individual view preferences. To preview your document for printing and sharing, use the Switch Backgrounds button to change the page background to light.

I have 'Night Mode' scheduled on my Windows 10 PC. Every day from 23:00 the night mode is being automatically enabled. Sometimes I want to turn it off for the current session without messing up my settings or having the need to reset my settings after I relog into my OS. I would like to have a shortcut for turning off the night mode for the current session, is there a way to do so? Thanks in advance...

I just got Anki and I was wondering if there was a way to activate night mode for the application. Also, I am on Windows 10. I looked on the manual and the only thing I could find was adding a line of code to make the card dark. Is there some other way that's less tedious where I can just change the color for the whole application?

I used to use overlay films of different types to make my screen red when imaging. While some / many astronomy software programs implement a Night Vision Mode, some don't and sometimes we use software tools while imaging that don't have such a mode (or don't follow the system settings pushed out by other programs that do). Hence arises the need to use Rubylith, Red Acetate, and other physical screens to cut back on any non-red lighting coming from the laptop.

While poking around in Windows 10, I found that you can configure it do a much better job than any external screens I have seen to date. I now no longer use any external device or software program for implementing Night Vision Mode. I can switch to a Windows mode which puts ALL software into Night Vision Mode. Below is a photo of my laptop screen using this mode. (I had to actually take a photo of the laptop screen instead of a screen shot since Windows doesn't properly show the results in captured screenshots.)

To set up this mode, I created a Windows Theme which used a plain black background. I then added a custom High Contrast Theme to Windows and set the custom desktop theme to use that. Next I configured the Windows 10 Night Light mode to use the lowest color temperature available. Finally, I turned on the Night Light mode in the Windows 10 Notification / Control sidebar. To put finishing touches on the configuration for ease of use, I created two shortcuts -- one sets the custom Night Vision Mode for imaging and the other restores my default custom theme for normal laptop use. In use, I click on the Imaging Theme shortcut at the beginning of the imaging session, turn on the Night Light mode and image away. At the end of the night, I click on the Normal Theme shortcut, turn off Night Light mode and I am back to using a typical daytime laptop.

The key advantage here for me is that any software you use while set up for imaging is in the stealth Night Vision Mode already. You don't need to turn on any such mode in any of the applications you are running. (In fact, I think it's better to leave them all in their normal operating mode when using this technique.) It is fun and a little unusual to see and use things like PixInsight in Night Vision Mode. I sometimes have it open to check star profiles and get noise estimates and such while imaging. Using Windows 10 to implement the Night Vision Mode makes that (and more) possible.

Super, thank you so much for sharing how to do this. This will be a real help with outreach as well. I already have set Windows 10 to go to a yellowed night mode after 7pm to make going to sleep later easier. I will play with this tonight. Because it's raining again.

The image Capture plan reduces power consumption and screen brightness as low as possible. It also allows me to close the lid and keep on imaging. The Image Setup plan uses slightly higher screen brightness but allows sleep mode when the lid is closed. Image Processing mode sets the brightness for normal room usage and mostly pulls out all the stops for highest CPU performance.

One last early view of the "secret sauce" to duplicate what I presented in the original post. I modified the Windows 10 High Contrast mode settings to get the color combinations shown above. If you want to duplicate what I did, start with the High Contrast #2 default Windows 10 preset. Then click on the colors for Text, Hyperlinks, Disabled Text, Selected Text, and Button Text to match what I show below. Once you have that set, be sure to save it so it can be selected again for use in a theme.

Unfortunately, the method I have described changes the whole display rather than just certain Windows elements. Therefore, even image windows become red tinted. They will show all red stars and DSOs in black and red just as if a red film had been placed over the whole screen. They will not allow you to judge color correction in the image display window.

It looks fantastic and I will be trying tonight. I can't wait to have SGP in red and black mode - I just realized that is what program was up in your original post. I can't stand how blindingly bright white its interface is! Thanks for doing this tutorial, John.

I will need to do some more research on what is different. My window title bars showed as deep purple (Orchid?) before turning on the Night Light. In the process of trying to see where the problem was on my system, It is now showing cyan window title bars and the color after applying the Night Light is green as you report. Somewhere in all my "monkey hitting keys" to get a mode that worked for me, something got set which I can no longer duplicate.

I will update the tutorial to add the edit steps but will continue to figure out how I was able to get the windows frame colors to stick on my prior theme version (which now no longer works for me either.)

I found the problem. My notes were wrong on the starting point for the High Contrast Settings. Instead of using the "High Contrast #2" setting as the starting point, you should use the "High Contrast Black" setting as a starting point instead. Then make the other color changes as outlined in the tutorial. You should end up with a deep purple Window Title Bar instead of Cyan. Now, when the Night Light mode is turned on, the window frames will turn red rather than green.

Actually, though, I kind of like the manually edited version a little better. I will update the tutorial to show using "High Contrast Black" as the starting point for color editing and will also include an optional section on editing the theme file to give pure red windows.

Thanks for this John. It looks great. I followed the directions and created two shortcuts on my desktop for the night vision and normal themes. One question, when I click on either of the shortcuts it applies the theme, but it also opens up the theme settings window. Not a big deal to close that windows but I'm wondering if there is a way to create the shortcut so that the theme settings window doesn't open automatically? ff782bc1db

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