Tuesday 6 May 2014

Desktop Curtain - Hide your clutter

Choose your focus

Desktop Curtain displays a stylized curtain or image that you can use to cover as much—or as little—of your screen as you'd like. You can place the curtain or image…
  • Behind the icons on your desktop, so it acts like a desktop image.
  • On top of your desktop icons, instantly hiding the clutter.
  • Behind the frontmost application, hiding everything but that application.
  • On demand, behind the frontmost window to focus your attention on just that window.

Choose your look

In addition to its built-in curtain, Desktop Curtain can use any picture file, the current OS X desktop picture, or a solid color as its curtain; the choice is yours.
Choose a curtain, an image, or a solid color
You can easily change the color of the stylized curtain, or of any image with translucency.
Desktop Curtain also keeps track of your last 10 used images, making it simple to choose from recently-used images.

You're in control

Desktop Curtain's settings give you full control over when and where you'll see its curtain (or image).
  • On multi-monitor Macs, choose between the display with the menu bar or all connected displays.
  • If you use Desktops (Spaces), choose whether Desktop Curtain shows on all Desktops, or just the current one.
  • Optionally hide Desktop Curtain when entering Mission Control (Exposé).
The Curtain settings tab
You also control the appearance of any images you use as curtains: their axes can be scaled proportionally or independently, or they can be centered or tiled.

Flexible features

Desktop Curtain can be run in any of three modes (standard application, menu bar icon, or completely invisible), and offers fast access to its key features via a contextual menu on the curtain itself, via Dock pop-up menus, or via its menu bar icon's menus.
You can define global hot keys to toggle the curtain's visibility or to isolate the frontmost window, and setting Desktop Curtain launch at login (with its curtain optionally hidden) is as simple as checking a box.
The Advanced settings tab
There's even an optional 'boss mode' hot key that will cover everything, including the Dock and Command-Tab switcher.