This tool provides various features to manage your wallpapers on dual monitors. Here it is recommended that you use a free tool - John Background Switcher. If you want to set different wallpaper on each of your monitors and have a high degree of control over that, the above 2 options may not suitable for you. W-LED: NTSC (1953) The NTSC (1953) color space is introduced in 1953 by the FCC with the appearance of color television and has a wider gamut than the sRGB.
There are various backlights such as CCFL, LED, WLED, RGB-LED, and etc. So, you can consider using a third-party tool. The type of backlight determines the image quality and the color space of the display. Besides, those images will randomly rotate positions every 30 minutes if they are not the exact resolution of your monitor. You have no control over where the images on the non-primary monitors will be set. You can set dual monitor wallpapers, but this method has its shortcomings. Select Set as desktop background from the right-click context menu.Īfter that, Windows will set those images as your wallpapers.
Select multiple images by pressing Ctrl or Shift key, and then right click on the image that you want to set it as your primary monitor, while the images you want to use are still selected. Press Win + E keys to open the File Explorer window. Alternatively, you can set different wallpaper for each monitor with Windows File Explorer. The first method may not be intuitive for you. Set Dual Monitor Wallpapers with the Windows File Explorer