How Do I Change My Desktop Wallpaper?
There are three kinds of desktop wallpapers supported in Windows 11, and Settings is how you access all of them.
An Easier Method for Picture Backgrounds
The steps described above are easy enough to understand, but there’s a much quicker way to change the desktop background if you want it to be of an image. Instead of opening Settings and navigating through the menus, you can apply the desktop wallpaper directly from the image itself. Or, if you’d rather use Settings, type WIN+i and then go to Personalization. The color option instead shows a table of colors and a Custom colors button you can use to find the exact color you want the wallpaper to be. This is how you change the desktop background from black to white, or from any other color into a different one. For a slideshow, Windows will automatically cycle through images in your Pictures folder, but there is a button there which lets you choose any folder on your computer. There are also settings you can edit, like for defining a schedule to automatically change the background every so often, and a shuffle toggle. Windows Spotlight cycles through Microsoft-provided backgrounds. After downloading the picture you want to use, or locating one already saved to your computer, there are two methods for making it your desktop background:
Right-click the file (don’t open it) and choose Set as desktop background.Open the image, right-click it (or open the menu at the top), and then go to Set as > Background.
Where Windows 11 Stores Its Default Wallpapers
There are brand-new wallpapers in Windows 11. If you change the background to a picture of your own too many times, you might lose track of where Microsoft’s images are within Settings. To use a default Windows 11 wallpaper if you don’t see it in the settings, go into this folder: From there, you can right-click the picture you want to use and follow the steps above to use it as the desktop background.
Lock Screen vs Desktop Background
You might notice, after changing the desktop background, it doesn’t affect the lock screen background. The lock screen is where you enter your password to log in, so you see it before you sign in to Windows, before you even see the desktop background. The lock screen background is controlled by an entirely separate setting, but it’s still easy to change.
Windows spotlight automatically changes the background to pictures chosen by Microsoft.Picture makes the background any picture you select from your computer.Slideshow cycles through photos of your choosing based on the folders you pick.