Stillpoint™
The reading format engineered for the human eye on screens.
You are reading in Stillpoint right now.
This page is designed to reduce eye strain. Not with a plugin. Not with a filter. With mathematics.
The background is not black. It is the color of walnut paneling — warm enough to prevent halation, the phenomenon where white text bleeds and glows on pure black, forcing the iris to overwork. Your eyes opened wider to read this sentence than they would on a white page. But they did not strain. The warmth told them it was safe.
The text is not white. It is warm cream at 87% luminance. The contrast ratio is 11.2:1 — exceeding the highest accessibility standard by 60% while staying below the fatigue threshold. You could read this page for hours. That is the point.
The maximum line width is 38em — approximately 65 characters. Beyond 75, the eye loses its place when returning to the left margin. Every line on this page is within the optimal reading range.
The line height is 1.8 — generous, airy, unhurried. The paragraph spacing follows φ (1.618em). Your eye knows where to rest because the proportion tells it.
There are no blue links. Blue light on dark backgrounds causes chromatic aberration — the eye cannot focus blue and warm tones at the same focal distance. Every link on this page is warm amber.
The reading temperature changes with the time of day.
Check the bottom-left corner.
Every value is derived from the same system that governs the rest of Lund Studio — the Divinity Rule. The ratio φ (1.618) determines the luminance, the spacing, the width, and the rhythm. Nothing is arbitrary. Everything is proportioned.
Stillpoint is not a dark mode. It is a reading environment derived from first principles.
You are not buying colors. You are buying the system that produced them.
License Stillpoint
Stillpoint is available for licensing. Your website, your app, your reading environment — built on the same proportional system. Implementation specs included. Derivation methodology stays with us.
Learn about licensing →