SFM - Surface Filter Mode
Chrome-extensions
Web pages rarely look the way you want them to. Designers, content creators, and power users constantly grab screenshots, open DevTools, or drop designs into Figma just to preview the same page with a warmer palette, higher contrast, or an alternate color theme. SFM short-circuits that dance by embedding a full creative suite directly into any browser tab. Install the extension, open a site, and the page becomes your canvas—no separate editor, no third-party server, no code pushed live.
Instead of forcing one universal filter, SFM gives granular control. Interactive selection boxes let you darken just the hero banner or sepia-tone the article body while leaving the navigation untouched. A slider-driven panel adjusts brightness, saturation, or vintage intensity in real time; hit save and the settings persist next time you return. If the goal is drama rather than subtle polish, animated border frames wrap elements in pulsing neon, cascading matrix characters, or glowing fire waves, all rendered on the fly with standard web APIs.
Advanced users switch to the code layer. A lightweight editor accepts custom CSS or JavaScript that executes only on your machine, letting you swap fonts, add hover micro-animations, or prototype new components without touching the real codebase. Combine that with gradient map overlays or blend modes like multiply and screen and you can push a page from stock Bootstrap into surreal digital art within minutes.
The absence of any mention of subscriptions, enterprise tiers, or even a paywall implies that SFM is currently offered as a free extension distributed from its Netlify site. Whether that model holds or shifts to a paid license the team has not disclosed, but for now the barrier to experimentation is exactly zero. In practice, anyone who remixes visuals for moodboards, pitch decks, or social media will find SFM a rapid-fire entry point; traditional designers gain an inspection playground; casual users can finally stop squinting at white backgrounds on dark-themed laptops.