When closed captioning is turned on, the texts are usually displayed at the bottom of the screen. The default style is white text on the block. However, you can change the style and color of the text and background. Closed captions are often used by people with hearing disabilities or folks in an area where sound is off or not permitted. When you need closed captions, it’s available in Windows 11. To get started with using closed captions on Windows 11, follow the steps below:
How to turn on or off closed captions on Windows 11
Again, as mentioned above, closed captions come ready to use in Windows. If video support closed captions, Windows 11 will display the text when enabled. To turn on closed captions on a video that’s playing, simply right-click or tap and hold anywhere on the video. A menu bar will appear at the bottom of the screen. If closed captioning is available, a CC icon will be displayed. To turn off closed captions, tap or click the CC icon. You can also tap or click the language you want to see closed captions in. Closed captioning will now appear on your screen.
How to change closed captions styles on Windows 11
By default, white text on a black background is chosen as the style when closed captions are enabled. Well, you can change that in Windows 11. Windows 11 has a centralized location for the majority of its settings. From system configurations to creating new users and updating Windows, all can be done from its System Settings pane. To get to System Settings, you can use the Windows key + I shortcut or click on Start ==> Settings as shown in the image below: Alternatively, you can use the search box on the taskbar and search for Settings. Then select to open it. Windows Settings pane should look similar to the image below. In Windows Settings, click Accessibility, and select Captions on the right pane of your screen shown in the image below. On the Captions settings pane, choose a style to use. By default White on black is selected. However, Yellow on blue, small caps, and Large caps are also available to select from. If the defaults are not good enough, click on the Edit button to choose from all text and background colors, fonts, caption transparency, caption size, windows color, and more. When you’re done, simply save your changes and exit. The next time closed captions are displayed, the color and styles you saved will be used. That’s should do it! Conclusion: This post showed you how to use closed captions when using Windows 11. If you find any error above, please use the comment form below to report.