Filed under: Software, Odds and ends
Monitor too bright? Put on some Shades
This one goes out to all the night owls. As much as I love my iMac, I was surprised to see how little control it gave me over the screen's brightness. I often work on my iMac late at night in an otherwise darkened room, and even at the lowest brightness setting, the iMac is really, really bright. All of the Mac laptops I've used have the ability to dim the screen down to completely dark, but the iMac does not.
That's where Shades comes in. Shades is a free preference panel which gives you the ability to control the brightness of your Mac through the menu bar or a floating slider control, or even keyboard shortcuts/hot keys: for example, to increase brightness when Shades is running, I can simply use the option/alt key and the up arrow (or the down-arrow to dim). I can also enable or disable Shades entirely or open the menu bar controls, all via the keyboard.
Shades will let you set a minimum brightness level so you don't accidentally make the screen so dim you can't see anything (although if you have enabled the Hot Keys feature you can use the keyboard to increase the brightness even if you can't see the screen). I recommend setting a minimum brightness that's still visible, especially if you have set your Mac to require a password on waking from sleep.
Shades supports multiple monitors, giving you independent control over each one. While I think this is a good feature (each monitor can have its own setting) the keyboard commands only change the main monitor. You have to adjust the secondary monitor's brightness with a slider control, which is easily done through the menu bar. However, if you have two monitors and have both of their controls in the menu bar, there is no easy way to know which one is which. There is a workaround for this: go into the Shades preference panel and click the tab for one of the monitors and set the "Menu control" to "Shades Icon"; then go to the tab for the other monitor and set the "Menu control" to "Brightness Icon". Now you will have two distinct icons in the menu bar, making it easier to know which monitor's brightness you are adjusting.
You could also use the "Menu control" for one monitor and the "Slider control" (which floats on-screen) for the other. The ability to sync the brightness levels of both monitors would be nice, but this is a very minor complaint. My external monitor has no brightness controls whatsoever (and I know other monitors which make you hunt through a series of on-screen menus) so without Shades I would have no way of controlling its brightness level.
Most laptop users may not need Shades, but it does offer finer control than what the built-in controls offer. If you're an iMac user (or a Mac Pro user with a monitor with hard-to-access brightness controls) who works late at night, give Shades a look. When you're done, simply quit Shades and the monitor will return to its regular brightness level.
Shades runs on either PPC or Intel Macs, and requires Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard or later.

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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
steve said 12:12PM on 10-18-2009
it always bugged me how shallow the vertical viewing angle was by default on my mbp. pure whites would start to invert if you shifted position and your head was a bit higher than the display.
shades provides a perfect fix: since it works by drawing a coloured overlay on your screen (you can even set the colour in preferences), you can set shades to 90% brightness, effectively replacing those pure white pixels with slightly tinted pixels. perceptually everything still looks white and plenty bright, but vertical viewing angle feels much broader!
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Lumi said 4:01PM on 10-18-2009
This one gets 5 stars. A technical insight I found to be pretty handy.
My aluminum iMac has an LCD panel as well, but also a backlight (controllable from the F1 and F2 keyboard keys). I have no Idea how it works. But the display angle thing bugged me as well, and does prompt me to install this app :)
TJ Luoma said 12:15PM on 10-18-2009
Steve — thanks for your comment. That usage never would have occurred to me, but you never know what's going to happen when folks hear about a new tool. Might be able to solve a problem out of left field.
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dakid2 said 5:19PM on 10-19-2009
Thanks so much for this. I had a brain injury years ago and have problems with light sensitivity. This is a life saver!
Roberto said 12:56PM on 10-18-2009
Why can't you do the same as in sound volume? Hold shift option while increasing/decreasing volume.
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ajoan0077 said 1:02PM on 10-18-2009
Ive been using shades for awhile now but the screen still bothers me, especially if im typing documents. So i just click control-opt-command-8 to change it to negative.
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mech said 6:23PM on 10-18-2009
nice
escargot said 1:06PM on 10-18-2009
I like an app called Nocturne. It has a red-tint mode that's perfect for working in an otherwise dark room.
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Scott H said 1:18PM on 10-18-2009
I found Shades 2 days after I got my new iMac 2 years ago. I was getting headaches using it, and it was on the lowest brightness setting. Once I had Shades installed, the headaches went away. I couldn't use my iMac without it. And I don't work at night or in low light!
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Fred Savage said 2:42PM on 10-18-2009
All it does is turn everything really blue.
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deluded spider said 6:43PM on 10-18-2009
You can change the color. I just used black, so it just literally "shades" all the colors.
I used to use f.lux on my PC. It took your zip code and figured when the sun was setting and then kicked in automatically during sunset. Because of that, it casts an orangey glow, which drove me kind of crazy, especially if I wanted to quickly do something in Photoshop but didn't want to bother disabling it.
I much prefer Shades. I just wish it could kick in at sunset like f.lux can.
TJ Luoma said 9:40AM on 10-19-2009
@deluded spider:
The pro ($10) version of Darkadapted can adjust things according to time of day:
http://www.aquiladigital.us/darkadapted/
Jordan said 3:12PM on 10-18-2009
You know pc laptops have been able to control the brightness from the keyboard...well, for years now.
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d said 3:43PM on 10-18-2009
Shades is for fine tuning your brightness settings allowing it to go dimmer than your computer would normally go. It's not about bringing new functionality to your keyboard, dummy.... Mac laptops have been able to adjust brightness settings from the keyboard for years too.
d said 3:48PM on 10-18-2009
My 24" iMac's brightness is way too bright even at the lowest setting. This app saves me from having to use my sunglasses while on my computer. And, I can rapidly adjust my HDTV with it too (connected to the mac in extended desktop mode). Very useful free app!
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Maxintech said 6:40PM on 10-18-2009
Same form my 24" iMac.
Shades it's a great piece of software.
Only one complaint. With fast user switching, shades doesn't detect the change of the user and a new overlay is added over the existing. Workaround: Choose Login Window from fast user switching menu instead of user name.
Chris said 3:55PM on 10-18-2009
Flux (http://www.stereopsis.com/flux/) is pretty awesome, too.
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deluded spider said 6:47PM on 10-18-2009
Does Flux allow you to change the "orangey" color to something else? As I said in another comment, I liked it on my PC but then the orange started to wear on me after a while.
mech said 6:31PM on 10-18-2009
Thanks for this, TUAW. Now I can use it on my mini9 to save it's screen and battery while hooked up to an external monitor. This thing is awesome!!!
cheers
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sahaskatta said 8:40PM on 10-18-2009
I just recommending actually putting on some sun glasses!
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