Luna Display Review (Podcast 631)

by | Sep 17, 2018 | Gear, Podcast, Review | 5 comments

This week we’re going to take a look at Luna Display, an amazing little device that turns your iPad into a wireless second display for your Mac. I backed the Kickstarter for this around a year ago, and have been very excited to finally use it after it was delivered last week.

Before we jump into the review, I’d like to apologize for my radio silence over the last few weeks. I decided to add a couple more features to our Photographer’s Friend app version 3.0, and one of them took a lot more time than I had expected, and to complete this kind of work, I really just have to go down-periscope and devote every waking minute to the project.

The app is now with Apple for review though, and I’m hoping to release it in the coming days, so stay tuned. If you’d like to be notified when Photographer’s Friend 3.0 becomes available, sign up for our newsletters.

Anyway, back to Luna Display. Luna Display is from the same people that brought us Astropad, that I reviewed in Episode 483 some three years ago now. Astropad has been great, but a lot has changed, and frankly, I feel that in many ways, Luna Display pretty much makes Astropad unnecessary, as you can do everything that it does over a Luna connection.

Luna Display comes in a tiny little box, 65 mm square, and the device itself 14 mm wide at the base, and protrudes just 18 mm from your computer. It comes in both a Mini-Display Port and a USB-C version. I bought the USB-C version because I’m using newer Mac computers. Both my MacBook Pro and iMac Pro have USB-C, so it was the natural choice for me.

Luna Display
Luna Display

To get started with Luna Display, you just need to go to the web page written on the insert and download and install the Mac software, and an App for the iPad from the Apple App Store. Once you have these installed, you can start the Luna app on your Mac, and you will initially see the following message (below), asking you to Open the Luna Display app on your iPad. If you open the app on the iPad first, it just connects, rather than displaying a message.

Open Luna Display on iPad
Open Luna Display on iPad

Once connected, you have a few choices that are presented to you in the Luna Display app on your Mac, including whether you’d like the screen to be on the left or right side of your computer, and whether or not you’d like to enable Retina Resolution. As you can see from the screenshot (below) I’ve been using Luna in Retina Resolution and it works flawlessly, although you do have to install a system extension the first time you enable Retina Resolution. 

Luna Display Settings Screen
Luna Display Settings Screen

I have to admit, when I first started Luna up, it was a bit glitchy, and I immediately started to feel underwhelmed, but then an update popup appeared, and since running that update, I haven’t had a single issue, so I was frustrated for perhaps 10 seconds, and then everything was fine.

There is a Custom button on the settings screen as well, that literally just opens up the Mac OS Displays settings, so you can fine-tune the position of the second display, and change the resolution if you’d like to. I have my iPad Pro running at its highest resolution through Luna Display, and as I mentioned, it works flawlessly. 

Mac OSX Display Settings via Luna Display
Mac OSX Display Settings via Luna Display

There is really no time-lag to speak of, so it’s a working solution that opens a lot of doors for people that own both a Mac computer and an iPad. I take my iPad Pro with me when I travel, in addition to my 13″ MacBook Pro, and because the screens are almost the exact same size, this setup feels really comfortable to work on. As you can see in this next image (below) I can run Capture One Pro in multimonitor mode, and because the iPad is touch-screen, I can just tap on a thumbnail of an image to jump directly to that image.

13" MacBook Pro with iPad Pro Running Luna Display
13″ MacBook Pro with iPad Pro Running Luna Display

It doesn’t stop with single taps emulating a mouse click. There is additional functionality built into the Luna Display software to enable multi-finger touch gestures, so for example, if you want to zoom in or out, you can simply pinch the screen, and zoom just like you would with images viewed directly on the iPad. This to me is really impressive, and although I don’t know how wide this support goes, if it works in Capture One Pro, I would imagine it will work in most other applications as well.

Pinch to Zoom on iPad
Pinch to Zoom on iPad

One last editing related aspect is that you can also use the Apple Pencil to directly edit images, which is incredible! I often do some pretty fine mask drawing while traveling, but this can be clunky to do with the trackpad, but it’s a breeze with the Apple Pencil! You can’t really see what I’ve done from this next screenshot, but I couldn’t help refining the mask around the Himba Girl shot from this year’s Namibia Tour.

Drawing a Mask in Capture One Pro with Apple Pencil
Drawing a Mask in Capture One Pro with Apple Pencil

Also, although you can change this in the preferences for Luna Display if you want to, by default, when you plug Luna into a USB port, the Mac software automatically opens and waits for your iPad software. The team seems to have thought of everything, as usual, so the entire solution is very smooth. 

Of course, I’m talking about Luna from a photography perspective today, but anyone that can benefit from having a second screen, or maybe even a third, would find it useful. Here’s an example of how you might use Luna in a music production environment (below). Putting the interface for a synthesizer on the iPad actually gives great tactile access to to the presets and knobs, and although this particular company has a great iPad app that does most of this, it’s rare to have that, and I can do much more by simply touching the screen on the original interface, so this is also a setup that I will be utilizing moving forward.

Luna Display in a DTM Setting
Luna Display in a DTM Setting

Before we finish I would like to mention that this post is not sponsored in any way. Although I know the team that created Luna Display, I did not contact them for a device and they have not paid me to do this review. I signed up for the Kickstarter and waited my turn for my unit like everyone else. I can say for sure though, that it was absolutely worth the wait.

I believe the Mini Display Port versions of Luna Display are still on back order, but looking at their website it does look as though they have stock of the USB-C version, so if you want one, it might be a good time to head over to lunadisplay.com and place your order.


Show Notes

See details or order your Luna Display at https://lunadisplay.com

Music by Martin Bailey


Audio

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5 Comments

  1. Mark

    Martin, I’ve tried a few app before and I’ve always been disappointed but Luna runs great. This is really cool running a second display of Lightroom also. A nice way of being able to show a client some photos without having them behind your computer screen. I also do some web design and being able to have some text or graphics that a client has sent on one screen for copy/paste is a real time saver. Thanks for sharing. Luna is a winner in my book. Now I’ve got to dig a little deeper to see just what it can do.

    Reply
    • Martin Bailey

      Hi Mark,

      I couldn’t agree more. I’m really pleased you are enjoying Luna too.

      I was also thinking that it will make doing ad-hoc workshop sessions better during my workshops. At the moment on tours that I don’t take a projector, people gather around my little 13″ MacBook Pro screen, but now I’ll be able to mirror the screen to a second 13″ screen on my iPad Pro! Both are small screens but having two of them will make it so much better.

      Regards,
      Martin.

      Reply
  2. Paul

    I’ve asked Astro team if they will support vertical orientation, that’d make a great client monitor during tethered shoot.

    Reply
  3. Eduard Boiger

    Dear Mr. Martin Bailey,

    I’m wondering, if you still use LUNA working with Capture One, for example using the new healing function, or drawing masks.
    Do you have any experience in using Catalina`s sidecar as 2nd monitor function.

    (Sorry, my English is really bad).

    Sincerely
    Eduard Boiger

    Reply
    • Martin Bailey

      Hi Eduard,

      Thanks for stopping by and for the comment.

      Since the release of Catalina, I have actually not used Luna at all. Sidecar works flawlessly and I have been using it in many different ways. Because of that, I haven’t tried working with Capture One via Luna for quite some time, especially not with the new features. I haven’t tested with Sidecar either for that matter, and I’m a bit pushed for time right now, but I’ll try it and get back to you over the next few days.

      Your English is perfect Eduard! Nothing to worry about there.

      Regards,
      Martin.

      Reply

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