Looking Glass demos Hololuminescent Display monitors — sizes range from 16 to 85 inches, starting at $1,500

3 hours ago 6

Looking Glass demos new Hololuminescent Display technology

(Image credit: Looking Glass)

Looking Glass has taken the wraps off its new monitors with Hololuminescent Display (HLD) technology. The firm has been in the holographic displays market for a decade, but it believes its new HLD monitors, which are just 1-inch thick and deliver up to a 4K resolution, can deliver “magical holograms that can be deployed anywhere.” HLD will allow the firm’s immersive light field to be rolled out anywhere standard video screens are used today.

Introducing Hololuminescent™ Display (HLD) - YouTube Introducing Hololuminescent™ Display (HLD) - YouTube

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Looking Glass demos new Hololuminescent Display technology

(Image credit: Looking Glass)

Here's how Looking Glass’ prior Light Field Displays (LFD) compare to these new HLD models.

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Feature

Hololuminescent Displays (HLD)

Light Field Displays (LFD)

Content Creation

Standard 2D content pipelines

Specialized 3D software

Setup Complexity

Easy to intermediate, Plug and Play

Intermediate to advanced 3D software

Ideal Content

People, products, characters

CAD, medical scans, terrain maps, data visualization

3D Effect

Fixed holographic stage for holographic depth cues

Multi-view parallax

Eye Tracking

None

None

Best For

Digital signage, retail, experiential displays

R&D, medical, engineering, 3D art

Sizes Available

16”, 27”, 86”

6”, 16”, 27”

Looking Glass demos new Hololuminescent Display technology
(Image credit: Looking Glass )

Looking Glass’s Hololuminescent Displays will be available in Q4, and will start at $1,500 for an FHD 16-inch display (pre-order offer). A 27-inch 4K HLD will ship in November and December of this year, and 86-inch 4K displays will roll out in February 2026, says the firm, but pricing is yet to be disclosed.

Looking Glass Light Field Displays, for advanced 3D visualization, interaction, and research, will continue to be offered to teams who work in 3D R&D and industrial visualization.

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Mark Tyson is a news editor at Tom's Hardware. He enjoys covering the full breadth of PC tech; from business and semiconductor design to products approaching the edge of reason.

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