Add a bright, hi-res, square LCD screen to your Raspberry Pi (or Pico) projects with this 1.54" Breakout Garden-compatible SPI display.
Now it's super-easy to incorporate into other Raspberry Pi or Raspberry Pi Pico projects. The screen is around 40% bigger (by area), giving you plenty of room to fill with detailed graphs or lots of data from sensors. Its 1:1 aspect ratio means it would also be good for displaying square images (like album art or Instagram photos).
It's an IPS display so has great viewing angles and it's super-crisp and bright. It's driven by SPI and you should be able to run it at up to ~50FPS, although we've found that anywhere from 10FPS looks good for most uses.
You can use this breakout completely solder-free (which is very handy for prototyping) by combining it with any of our Breakout Gardens with SPI - check out the extras tab for some options! We've also included a strip of male header in case you want to hook it up to your SBC or microcontroller with wires, all traditional-like.
Features
- 1.54" colour LCD (240x240 pixels)
- SPI interface
- 3.3V or 5V compatible
- Reverse polarity protection
- Compatible with all models of Raspberry Pi (Python library)
- Compatible with Raspberry Pi Pico (C++/MicroPython libraries)
Specifications
- 240x240 pixels (~220 PPI)
- 27.72mm x 27.72mm active area
- Brightness: 250 cd/m^2
- 900:1 contrast ratio
- 160° viewing angle (horizontal and vertical)
- ST7789V driver chip
- Dimensions: approx 45mm x 32mm x 5mm
Getting Started (Raspberry Pi)
This breakout uses the same ST7789 library as our square and round LCDs. The library makes it straightforward to display images, text or graphics, and even display animated GIFs!
If you're not using a Breakout Garden, then this is how to connect your LCD Breakout up to your Raspberry Pi.
Our Python library is set up to use SPI 0 by default on the Pi (BCM 7 for CS, BCM 11 for SCK, and BCM 10 for MOSI), BCM 9 for DC, and BCM 19 for the backlight.
Here's which pins to connect between your LCD breakout and your Pi's GPIO (note that it's BCM pin numbering):
- 3-5V to any 5V or 3V pin
- CS to BCM 7
- SCK to BCM 11
- MOSI to BCM 10
- DC to BCM 9
- BL to BCM 19
- GND to any ground pin
You can of course use other pins with your LCD Breakout, but you'll have to change them accordingly when you instantiate the display in your code.
Getting Started (Raspberry Pi Pico)
If you're using a Raspberry Pi Pico you can copy our custom MicroPython uf2 to your Pico which includes drivers for this screen.
- Getting Started with MicroPython tutorial
- C++ example for 1.54" screen
- MicroPython example for 1.54" screen
- PicoGraphics function reference
If you'd rather wire them up to a Pico directly, here's how it goes!
- 3-5V to any 5V or 3V pin
- CS to GP17
- SCK to GP18
- MOSI to GP19
- DC to GP16
- BL to GP20
- GND to any ground pin
Notes
This display has a shinier surface than its smaller cousin.