Lighting that supports clarity

Fix glare. Make text feel effortless.

Screen readability is often a lighting problem, not an equipment problem. Use this page to audit glare, adjust lamp placement, and tune display settings with small, testable changes.

Scandinavian idea Soft, indirect light beats harsh brightness for most desks.
What to watch Reflections, hotspots, and inconsistent contrast across tasks.

Lighting audit

Three quick checks for glare and reflections

Glare and reflections checklist visual
1
Sunlight test When the sun is strongest, look at the screen at two angles: straight and slightly from the side. If you see moving reflections, adjust monitor position or use a simple shade.
2
Lamp angle test Turn your desk lamp on. If the light “paints” the screen, the lamp is likely too directly aligned. Rotate the lamp 20–40 degrees or lower the shade so light bounces off nearby surfaces.
3
Contrast test Switch between a bright page and a dark UI. Notice whether the screen feels washed out or too dark. Adjust brightness and display scaling before assuming anything is wrong with your eyes.

Simple fixes to try first

  • Move the monitor so windows aren’t behind it.
  • Use a light shade (diffuser) on the lamp.
  • Keep the brightest light source outside your direct line of sight.
  • Choose warm bulbs for cozy ambience and neutral bulbs for task clarity.

Why glare steals focus

Glare forces the brain to “fight” visibility. Instead of reading comfortably, you compensate by squinting or changing distance. That adds micro-tension to your posture and makes attention less stable.

Screen setup

Dial in readability: brightness, scale, and viewing distance

Great lighting plus thoughtful display settings usually beats “one magic device.”

Start with environment, then display

Reduce glare first. Then tune screen settings. If you change brightness while glare remains, you’ll create new problems. The clean sequence is: glare → readability → comfort.

  • Set brightness to match the room brightness (avoid max brightness in dim rooms).
  • Use a text size that you don’t “hunt” for.
  • Keep your monitor at a stable height so your head position stays consistent.

Build a short verification habit

After you adjust, test with two real tasks: one you read often, and one you write often. If both feel smoother, the change worked. If one feels worse, revert or tweak.

Small preference notes

  • Keep the same app zoom level for consistency.
  • Use dark mode only if it truly feels comfortable in your lighting.
  • Don’t chase perfection. Aim for “good enough” readability.

Health & Safety Guidelines

Safety notes for screen-heavy days

Treat these as everyday safety hygiene for desk work.

Visibility safety

  • Avoid strong reflections that move as you shift your head.
  • Choose brightness and contrast that feel stable across tasks.
  • Make sure your desk lighting doesn’t flicker noticeably.
  • Keep the screen clean enough to reduce haze from dust.

Work rhythm safety

  • Use task-based pauses (after forms, after messages, after edits).
  • Stand up briefly and look away from the screen to reset your attention.
  • Keep cables and chargers secured so your workspace stays predictable.
  • Make adjustments early in the day, not only after fatigue appears.
Disclaimer

This website provides general lifestyle information only and does not constitute professional guidance.

FAQs

Lighting & screen FAQs (quick and practical)

Can I fix glare just by lowering brightness?

Often, brightness alone won’t remove reflections. If light is physically bouncing into your screen, you need to change geometry: move the monitor, rotate the lamp, or add a shade that redirects light. Start with the source, then fine-tune brightness.

Should I use a blue light filter?

If it helps you feel comfortable, it can be a preference choice. But don’t let it replace basic setup. Glare, contrast mismatch, and tiny text are still issues even with filters. Prioritize clear readability and stable lighting first.

Why does my screen feel different at night?

Room lighting changes the perceived contrast. In the evening, your eyes may need lower brightness or a different lamp placement. Use the same “contrast test” from this page when the light conditions change.