Tech Support > Microsoft Windows > Windows colours and fonts corrupted
Windows colours and fonts corrupted
Posted by les on November 14th, 2005


My windows colours and fonts seem to be corrupted. This screenshot
http://62.204.33.93/Image1.gif shows the display properties dialog.

Notice that it is about twice the usual size and the colours are very
strange. Fonts are very big too so some words are truncated. In some
cases the font colour is the same as the background so the text is
invisible.

Obviously I have tried changing the colours/themes but they don't stay
how I set them and they also seem to change randomly

I don't think it's a driver or hardware problem. I have another
windows installation on the same box which is fine. Maybe it's a
virus, but I did as scan and nothing was detected. I suspect it's
something wrong in windows itself.

Can anyone advise?
Thanks
Leslie

Posted by Ramesh, MS-MVP on November 15th, 2005


Change to Windows XP Theme, and reboot. If the changes are reverted, then it
must be a background application doing this.

Isolate the problem by clean-booting the system.

How to perform a clean boot in Windows XP:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310353

How to perform advanced clean-boot troubleshooting in Windows XP:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/316434

You may also try creating a new user account to determine if this is a
system-wide problem or not.

--
Ramesh, Microsoft MVP
Windows XP Shell/User

Windows XP Troubleshooting
http://www.winhelponline.com


<les> wrote in message news:sbphn19s31k7emvi0ihshd306tl0ee2d02@4ax.com...
> My windows colours and fonts seem to be corrupted. This screenshot
> http://62.204.33.93/Image1.gif shows the display properties dialog.
>
> Notice that it is about twice the usual size and the colours are very
> strange. Fonts are very big too so some words are truncated. In some
> cases the font colour is the same as the background so the text is
> invisible.
>
> Obviously I have tried changing the colours/themes but they don't stay
> how I set them and they also seem to change randomly
>
> I don't think it's a driver or hardware problem. I have another
> windows installation on the same box which is fine. Maybe it's a
> virus, but I did as scan and nothing was detected. I suspect it's
> something wrong in windows itself.
>
> Can anyone advise?
> Thanks
> Leslie


Posted by les on November 15th, 2005


Thanks Ramesh,

I tried loging in as another user and the same problem occurs. I also
tried a clean boot and again the same problem.

The first sign of trouble is before login. The login box is
enlarged... wider than usual with bigger text although the title bar
of the login box is the normal height with normal font size.

Any more ideas would be welcome..

Thanks
Leslie

On Tue, 15 Nov 2005 09:07:10 +0530, "Ramesh, MS-MVP"
<ramesh@XOX.mvps.org> wrote:

>Change to Windows XP Theme, and reboot. If the changes are reverted, then it
>must be a background application doing this.
>
>Isolate the problem by clean-booting the system.
>
>How to perform a clean boot in Windows XP:
>http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310353
>
>How to perform advanced clean-boot troubleshooting in Windows XP:
>http://support.microsoft.com/kb/316434
>
>You may also try creating a new user account to determine if this is a
>system-wide problem or not.


Posted by Keith Miller on November 16th, 2005


Check under Accessibility Options in Control Panel. On the 'Display' tab, uncheck "Use High Contrast"

Keith

<les> wrote in message newseckn1drjv7qrnqgb64g92ug5ofeprq2pi@4ax.com...
> Thanks Ramesh,
>
> I tried loging in as another user and the same problem occurs. I also
> tried a clean boot and again the same problem.
>
> The first sign of trouble is before login. The login box is
> enlarged... wider than usual with bigger text although the title bar
> of the login box is the normal height with normal font size.
>
> Any more ideas would be welcome..
>
> Thanks
> Leslie
>
> On Tue, 15 Nov 2005 09:07:10 +0530, "Ramesh, MS-MVP"
> <ramesh@XOX.mvps.org> wrote:
>
> >Change to Windows XP Theme, and reboot. If the changes are reverted, then it
> >must be a background application doing this.
> >
> >Isolate the problem by clean-booting the system.
> >
> >How to perform a clean boot in Windows XP:
> >http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310353
> >
> >How to perform advanced clean-boot troubleshooting in Windows XP:
> >http://support.microsoft.com/kb/316434
> >
> >You may also try creating a new user account to determine if this is a
> >system-wide problem or not.

>

Posted by les on November 16th, 2005


Good idea Keith... but it's already unchecked

Another strange thing is the event viewer. If I look at an event's
properties the window is large, as are the text and buttons, except
for the description of the event which is much too small to read. I
have to copy and paste the text into notepad to see it.

I have a 6 week old copy of my system drive. Is there any part of the
windows folder I could use from this to replace what might be causing
the problem? I tried replacing the whole windows folder... that got
rid of the display problem but caused a few more other problems.


On Tue, 15 Nov 2005 18:33:09 -0600, "Keith Miller"
<k.miller79@verizon.net> wrote:

>Check under Accessibility Options in Control Panel. On the 'Display' tab, uncheck "Use High Contrast"
>
>Keith
>
><les> wrote in message newseckn1drjv7qrnqgb64g92ug5ofeprq2pi@4ax.com...
>> Thanks Ramesh,
>>
>> I tried loging in as another user and the same problem occurs. I also
>> tried a clean boot and again the same problem.
>>
>> The first sign of trouble is before login. The login box is
>> enlarged... wider than usual with bigger text although the title bar
>> of the login box is the normal height with normal font size.
>>
>> Any more ideas would be welcome..
>>
>> Thanks
>> Leslie
>>
>> On Tue, 15 Nov 2005 09:07:10 +0530, "Ramesh, MS-MVP"
>> <ramesh@XOX.mvps.org> wrote:
>>
>> >Change to Windows XP Theme, and reboot. If the changes are reverted, then it
>> >must be a background application doing this.
>> >
>> >Isolate the problem by clean-booting the system.
>> >
>> >How to perform a clean boot in Windows XP:
>> >http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310353
>> >
>> >How to perform advanced clean-boot troubleshooting in Windows XP:
>> >http://support.microsoft.com/kb/316434
>> >
>> >You may also try creating a new user account to determine if this is a
>> >system-wide problem or not.

>>



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