How to take a screenshot of an entire webpage
Quickly take a screenshot of a full webpage with a single click in your web browser using the extension that will quickly make the full page to full page screenshot image in the new tab. Follow the below article to know how you can do that.
Many of you might keep on searching for all new things over the internet. As a tech geek, I also find tech guides, but sometimes we need to save some research for later use quickly. In that situation, we keep on taking some of the screenshots or bookmarking the pages. But the most common problem that every user faces is the screenshot of the complete web page. Usually, this is taken on the current screen resolution, and I am sure almost every website page is captured in the 2-3 screenshots, and that can increase your work quite more. And what if you can take the entire web page screenshot in a single go.
Yes, it’s possible as in this guide we are discussing the same. And with the help of this, you can quickly capture the entire web page screenshot with a single click. So have a look at the complete guide discussed below to proceed.
Steps To Take Screenshot Of Full Webpage in Windows 10
The method is straightforward and straight, and you need to use a simple browser extension that will take screenshots instantly of the complete web page. So follow the below step by step guide to do it.
Step 1. First of all, in your browser, you need to add the extension that will take the entire web page screenshot for you, and the extension Full Web Page Screenshots will be helpful, and this is available for both Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome.
Step 2. Visit the page and add this extension to your browser, and within seconds it will get added to your browser. Now you will see the camera-like icon at the top right corner of your browser, indicating that the extension is successfully added to your browser.
Step 3. Now you need to open the web page whose full-page screenshot you want to capture.
Step 4. Now click on the camera icon there, and this will take 2-3 seconds, and a screenshot will get captured and will get opened in the new tab, and you can directly save that image to your computer.
That’s it, and you are done. Now you will have the complete web page screenshot in a single click.
Using Fireshot
FireShot takes full web page screenshots. You can edit and annotate captures. You can capture web pages entirely to PDF / JPEG / PNG files, print, or copy to clipboard. FireShot can work offline. This is a must-have for every Google Chrome users as this is not limited to taking screenshots. You also get some extended options to use the screenshots. Let’s know how to use it.
Step 1. First of all, you need to open your Google Chrome browser and search for Fireshot. Or else, click on this link, which will take you to Chrome Webstore, enable the extension.
Step 2. Now, after installing the extension on your Google Chrome browser, you will notice a small “S” icon added to your extension bar.
Step 3. Now you need to visit the website which you want to capture the entire page. Click on the “S” icon, and there click on “Capture Entire Page.”
Step 4. You will be immediately redirected to the new page, where you will get to see the screenshot.
Step 5. Now, if you want to save the image on your computer, click on “Save as Image.”
That’s it! You are done. This is the easiest way to capture the entire webpage.
Using the above guide, you can easily save the complete web page in a single screenshot, which will be hugely helpful in your daily use. I hope you like this; keep on sharing with others too. Leave a comment below if you have any related queries with this.
Have you ever wanted to take a screen capture of a whole Web page, but could only capture what was on your screen? We’ll show you how to use a cool Google Chrome extension to capture a whole page.
Screen captures can be immensely useful for education, support, presentations, etc. When capturing Web pages, your captures are typically limited to what is viewable on the screen. A Chrome extension by Google, however, allows you to capture an entire page. Here’s how:
Step 1:
Go to the Chrome Web store and search for “screen capture” in the search box.
alt=”Chrome web store” width=”370″ height=”190″ /> Screenshot by Ed Rhee
Step 2:
Select the “Screen Capture (by Google)” extension and install it.
alt=”Install Screen Capture by Google” width=”370″ height=”179″ /> Screenshot by Ed Rhee
Step 3:
After installation, click on the Screen Capture button on the Chrome toolbar and select Capture Whole Page or use the keyboard shortcut, Ctrl+Alt+H.
alt=”Chrome capture whole page” />Screenshot by Ed Rhee
Step 4:
You’ll see Chrome scrolling down to capture the whole page and once finished, an options bar will display above the Web page that allows annotations, sharing, and saving the capture.
Screenshot by Ed Rhee
With this nifty Chrome extension installed, you can now capture my How To articles in their entirety, for later viewing or sharing. Seriously.
As more and more things turn digital, screenshots play more and more important role in our lives. We take screenshots to keep a record of certain things or to show to others as proof. Sometimes the area to be captured is long, and we end up taking multiple screenshots after scrolling to next page(s). In the most recent update to Oxygen OS (3.5 and higher), OnePlus has baked in the ability to take longer screenshots from pages/apps which scroll vertically. This lets you take a long screenshot which covers all the information divided over multiple pages.
Taking Scrolling Screenshots in OnePlus Devices
The steps to take longer, vertically scrolling screenshots is pretty much the same. Here’s the process divided into a few steps which are simple to follow:
- Open the app/webpage which you want to capture.
- Press the Volume Down and Power key together as you normally do to take the screenshot.
- Tap on the Long Screenshot (third) button on the bottom of screenshot pop-up.
- Let the system scroll the page down and capture a long screenshot. Tap anywhere on the screen to stop scrolling further and capture the screenshot.
Long Screenshot gets saved to the same location where normal screenshots are saved. You can access them via gallery for editing, sharing or anything else.
PS: Don’t share the long screenshots directly on messaging apps (like WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger). This may cause the screenshots to become unreadable. Hence, upload the long screenshot to a cloud service (Google Drive, OneDrive; etc) for sharing purposes.
Jason FitzpatrickJason Fitzpatrick
Editor at Large
Jason Fitzpatrick is the Editor in Chief of LifeSavvy, How-To Geek’s sister site focused life hacks, tips, and tricks. He has over a decade of experience in publishing and has authored thousands of articles at Review Geek, How-To Geek, and Lifehacker. Jason served as Lifehacker’s Weekend Editor before he joined How-To Geek. Read more.
A simple screenshot is great for capturing what’s immediately visible on your monitor, but what if you need to capture an entire webpage? Here are three simple ways you can capture a long web page as one continuous image and, in the process, preserve it exactly as it appears to the viewer.
The Method Matters: Screenshot vs. Printing
Windows 10, macOS, and many browsers allow you to “print” any page to a PDF file. Older versions of Windows also contain the built-in ability to “print” any file to XPS, a PDF-like alternative. Just go to the web page you want, select File > Print, and choose “Microsoft Print to PDF” (if you have it) or “Microsoft XPS Document Writer” (if you don’t). In macOS, click the “PDF” button on the Print dialog.
Given this, you might be wondering why capturing a screenshot of a webpage even matters. Wouldn’t it be simple enough to just Press Ctrl+P and convert a web page into a PDF or XPS?
While PDF is great for documents, it has an inherent shortcoming when it comes to preserving a webpage. Regardless of the document creator you use, it functions as a virtual printer, which any shortcomings the physical printing process would have (poor column alignment, advertisements overlapping the text, etc.) will appear in the document created by the virtual printer. Further, if the website in question has a specific “print view” to alleviate the aforementioned issues, that means you’re not preserving the webpage as it appears, but preserving the webpage as it is formatted for printing.
When you use a screen capture tool, you’re not churning the webpage through a document creator. You’re capturing—pixel for pixel—exactly what you see on the screen. Not only is that useful for archival purposes, as you’re getting an exact 1:1 representation of the webpage, but you’re also able to show other people exactly how the page looks as oppose to exactly how the page prints.
With that in mind, let’s look at three techniques you can use to capture an entire webpage in a single screenshot: standalone screen capture tools, browser plugins, and a handy web-based service that works wherever you are.
Option One: Capture a Webpage with a Standalone Screenshot Tool
While the vast majority of operating systems have a built in screen capture tool, that tool is typically pretty basic. It might do a fine job capturing parts of your screen, but it won’t have the bells and whistles necessary to capture a whole webpage.
Fortunately, there are tons of third party tools that sport “scrolling capture” or “full page” capture, wherein the screenshot tool will scroll through the webpage for you capturing and stitch the screenshots into one continuous image. The screen capture tool I’ve used for ages, FastStone Capture (Windows, $20, seen above), has this feature; triggered by a toolbar button or by pressing Ctrl+Alt+PrtScn. Note: You can still download the older, free version of FastStone Capture from The Portable Freeware Collection (although this version lacks newer features, it does have scrolling capture).
Screenpresso (Windows, free) also has a scrolling capture feature, as does popular capture tool SnagIt (Windows/Mac, $50). When looking for a screen capture tool (or searching through the documentation of the tool you already have) search for the keyword “scrolling” to see if it has the necessary feature.
Option Two: Capture a Webpage with a Browser Plugin
Standalone screen capture tools are great if you regularly use them, but if your work only requires you to capture webpages once in a while, then it makes more sense to use a browser-based tool.
While there are more than a handful of browser extension tools out there, we like Nimbus Screenshot, seen above. It’s free, it’s available for both Chrome and Firefox, and it has a nice clean interface that gets the job done. One click and it captures and aligns the image for you. Better yet, you can easily save the image to your PC when you’re done or upload it to your Google Drive or Slack.
Option Three: Capture a Webpage with a Web-Based Tool
So what if you just need a one-off capture to send to your boss? You don’t have to install something to grab it—as long as the webpage in question is publicly accessible (like a How-To Geek article and not some site you have to log in to first), you can easily use the free Screen Capture tool at CtrlQ.org or the similar tool at Web-Capture.net.
While both tools work well enough, Web-Capture has an edge on two fronts: it allows you to specify the image format, and supports capturing via bookmarklet (so you can put a shortcut in your browser’s toolbar to access the capture service). If you’re new to bookmarklets, check out our handy guide.
That’s all there is to it: whether you’re using a third party tool, a browser extension, or even a web-based tool, you can easily capture an entire webpage in a single image file to preserve it for posterity, your boss, a court case, or whatever reason you have for desiring a perfect pixel-to-pixel representation of a whole webpage.
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Jason Fitzpatrick
Jason Fitzpatrick is the Editor in Chief of LifeSavvy, How-To Geek’s sister site focused life hacks, tips, and tricks. He has over a decade of experience in publishing and has authored thousands of articles at Review Geek, How-To Geek, and Lifehacker. Jason served as Lifehacker’s Weekend Editor before he joined How-To Geek.
Read Full Bio »
Khamosh PathakKhamosh Pathak
Writer
Khamosh Pathak is a freelance technology writer who specializes in tutorials. His work has also been published on Lifehacker, iPhoneHacks, Zapier’s blog, MakeUseOf, and Guiding Tech. Khamosh has nearly a decade of experience writing how-tos, features and technology guides on the internet. Read more.
There might be times when you need to capture a screenshot of an entire webpage, perhaps to share a recipe or a how-to from our website. Use Microsoft Edge’s built-in feature to capture full-page screenshots in JPEG format.
Full-page screenshots captured in a JPEG format (as opposed to PDF) make it easy to store and share web pages, especially when you’re using messaging platforms like iMessage, Facebook Messenger, or WhatsApp.
To get started, open the Microsoft Edge browser on your Windows 10 or Mac computer and go to the web page that you want to capture.
After opening the page, scroll all the way to the bottom of the page to make sure that the Web Capture feature loads all images in the article. In our testing, we found that Edge did not include images if we didn’t scroll through the page.
Now, click the Web Capture button from the toolbar. If you don’t see this, make sure that you’re running the latest version of Microsoft Edge.
Here, choose the “Full Page” option.
Now, you’ll see the Web Capture menu. Here, you can scroll to see everything you captured in the screenshot (and to make sure that all elements, including images, are showing up).
If you want to annotate or draw over the screenshot, click the “Draw” button.
From the drop-down next to the Draw button, select the color and the thickness of the stroke.
Then use your cursor to draw over the screenshot. You can use the “Erase” option to delete any annotations.
Once you’re done, click the save button (which looks like a floppy disk) from the toolbar.
Microsoft Edge will instantly download the full-page JPEG image to the default download folder on your computer. You can click the “Open File” button from the downloads bar from the bottom of the window to open the screenshot.
Here, you’ll see a long screenshot of the entire article in one flowing image. Unlike a PDF capture, it will not be divided into pages. If you want to save a web page as a paginated PDF, you can always use the Print to PDF feature in Microsoft Edge.
Want to capture full-page websites on your iPhone or iPad? Just use the built-in Safari feature!
- › Why Professionals Will Actually Want a 2021 MacBook Pro
- › How to Add Images to Questions in Google Forms
- › How to Delete Your Photos on Facebook
- › Razer Thinks You Want a PC Gaming Headset That Vibrates
- › How to Get a Link to a Photo or Video on Instagram
Khamosh Pathak
Khamosh Pathak is a freelance technology writer who specializes in tutorials. His work has also been published on Lifehacker, iPhoneHacks, Zapier’s blog, MakeUseOf, and Guiding Tech. Khamosh has nearly a decade of experience writing how-tos, features and technology guides on the internet.
Read Full Bio »
Where do screenshots go on PC? How do you find screenshots in Windows 10/8/7?
While the daily usage of your computer, you may frequently have the need to take screenshots. Screen capturing is quite useful for sharing, education, support, presentation, and more. You can easily capture current web page and content typically limited to what is displayed on the screen.
Do you know how to take a scroll screenshot and screenshot entire webpage? Surely you can easily capture what’s immediately visible on your monitor. What if you need to screenshot the full web page in popular browser like Chrome, Firefox or Safari? Have you ever wanted to take a screenshot of a whole webpage?
You are at the right place if you are looking for a way to screenshot entire webpage on Windows PC and Mac. We like to share some effective solutions to help you take a screenshot of entire screen with ease.
- Part 1. How to Scroll Screenshot in Firefox
- Part 2. Screenshot Entire Webpage in Chrome
- Part 3. Capture Mac Scrolling Screenshot in Safari
- Part 4. Screenshot a Whole Webpage in Any Browser
- Part 5. FAQs of Screenshot Entire Webpage
Part 1. How to Scroll Screenshot in Firefox
In fact, it is quite easy to screenshot entire webpage in Firefox browser. Firefox is designed with a scroll screenshot feature to ensure you can take, download, collect and share screenshots with ease. You can rely on this feature to take a screenshot of entire web page in Firefox.
Part 2. How to Screenshot Entire Webpage in Chrome
If you are a Google Chrome user and want to take a screenshot of entire web page, you can rely on some screenshot plug-in like GoFullPage . It provides a simple way to take a full page screenshot of your current browser window.
- on browser like Chrome, Firefox, IE, or Safari.
- Take a screenshot of computer screen with high image quality.
- Screenshot on computer with full screen, active window or customized region.
- Take a screenshot and save it in any popular image format like JPG, PNG, HEIC, or GIF.
- Powerful editing features to edit screenshot and add various elements to it.
Part 3. Capture Mac Scrolling Screenshot in Safari
When you want to capture a Mac scrolling screenshot in Safari, you can choose to directly export the entire web page as a PDF file. You can click “File” and then choose “Export as PDF” to do that. Also, you can rely on some Safari extension like Awesome Screenshot to help you screenshot entire web page.
Part 4. How to Screenshot a Whole Webpage in Any Browser
Whether you are using Chrome, IE, Firefox, Safari or other browsers, you can rely on the entire screenshot site to help you take a screenshot of a whole web page on your Windows PC or Mac. Here we introduce you with the popular full-screen screen capture site, Site-Shot .
Part 5. FAQs of Screenshot Entire Webpage
Frequently Asked Questions
Question 1. How to take a screenshot on iPhone?
You can press the Side button and the Volume Up button at the same time to quickly capture a screenshot if you are using an iPhone X/XR/11. If you are using an old iOS device like iPhone 8/7/6/5 which has a Home button, you can press Home button and Power button together to make a screenshot on iPhone.
Question 2. How can I take a screenshot on Mac?
When you want to take a screenshot on Mac, you can press the Command + Shift + 3 keys at the same time to capture your Mac screen easily.
Question 3. How to take screenshots on Android phone?
For most Android devices, you can handily press Power and Volume down buttons at the same time to screenshot your Android screen.
After reading this post, you can get 4 simple ways to screenshot entire webpage in popular browser like Chrome, Safari, IE, and Firefox. If you still have any questions about the scroll screenshot, you can leave us a message in the comment part.
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Screen Recorder
Aiseesoft Screen Recorder is the best screen recording software to capture any activity like online videos, webcam calls, game on Windows/Mac.
Tell me if this sounds familiar: You need to take a screenshot of a web page, but you don’t just want one small part of the page, so a drag-and-snap screenshot is out. You don’t want just the info "above the fold" that's visible on your screen without scrolling, so a normal screenshot is out. You need the whole web page—or at least more than one small part of it.
So short of the arduous process of scrolling down a page at a time, capturing one window screenshot again and again, then cobbling it all together at the end—what are your options?
Well, you could use a screenshot tool or a browser extension, but many of these won’t help you with full-page screenshots (or will be just as long and painful as the first method).
Instead, just use Google Chrome’s built-in full-page screenshot tool, launched in early 2017 and not very obvious to find. Here's the shortcut to getting a full-page screenshot in Chrome without having to install any extension or tool.
Note: This tool works best on text-heavy pages and won't necessarily work on web apps. After testing this tool with several different web apps, we've concluded it really just depends on the app. (For example, in Google Docs, the tool will only capture the visible window, while in Zapier it captures the entire length of the page.)
The Chrome Shortcut for Taking a Full-Page Screenshot
Google Chrome includes a built-in screenshot tool, but it's a bit hidden. You'll first enter two sets of keyboard shortcuts, then enter a command to capture a full-page screenshot of any web page. Start by using the shortcut pairs below—enter the first shortcut, followed by the second—depending on your operating system:
On Mac 1. Alt + Command + I 2. Command + Shift + P
On Windows/Linux/Chrome OS 1. Ctrl + Shift + I 2. Ctrl + Shift + P
These keyboard shortcuts will open Chrome's developer menu. Just type "screenshot" and you'll see the option appear to "capture full size screenshot." Simply select this and Chrome will automatically save a full-page screenshot to your Downloads folder!
How to Take a Full-Page Screenshot with a Custom Size
The keyboard shortcut method is a great way to quickly get the screenshot you need, but if you want to customize the width of your screenshot, you'll have to take a few more steps to get it.
Step 1: Open Developer Tools
First, you’ll need to open Developer Tools in Chrome—the first step from before. You can do this by opening the "More Options" menu on your Chrome toolbar, or by using the shortcut Alt + Command + I on Mac or Ctrl + Shift + C on Windows as before.
This will open a whole world of developer tools, including the surprisingly useful Inspect Element tool. But you’re looking for the Device Toolbar—one small icon in the top-center of the Developer Tools that looks like a phone on top of a tablet (or, two rectangles). Click on this to open a responsive version of the web page.
Step 2: Choose Your Size
In the Device Toolbar, you'll see three options for your view: a dropdown menu (currently set to Responsive ), the dimensions of the view, and the zoom level. Adjust these to customize your screenshot.
Once you've done, you're good to go!
Step 3: Capture the Screenshot!
To download your full-page screenshot, just open the extra menu options in your Device Toolbar (see screenshot), and select "Capture full size screenshot."
Chrome will automatically download the full page. From here, crop as needed to get the image you need.
Keep Learning
Introducing: Zappy by Zapier, a screenshot tool for macOS that helps your team share what you see in a snap. With easy-to-use annotation tools, Zappy can help you collaborate with your teammates fast. Quickly capture and share screenshots, GIFs, and recordings for free. Learn more about Zappy.
Want the perfect screenshot? Chrome's Inspect Element tool allows you to temporarily edit any webpage, so you can tailor everything perfectly for your screenshot. Check it out for yourself!
Learn how to Capture the Perfect Screenshot, whether you're making top-notch tutorials or just want to send your buddy a quick snapshot of your Candy Crush high score.
If you're a fan of the Chrome browser, you won't want to miss these 12 free Chrome extensions. They're our favorites for getting work done quickly and well.
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Emily Irish is a writer on the Zapier team and hails from Raleigh, NC. When not writing about productivity, she writes fiction and reads everything she can get her hands on. Follow her on Twitter @irishthewriter.
I’ve already share 3 awesome tools to take screenshots for Mac/Windows. But when it comes to taking a screenshot of a full web page, these tools aren’t the best options. Whenever I try to take a screenshot of an entire web page by using PicPick, it doesn’t work smoothly and I don’t get the exact image that I want. In this post, I will be talking about three ways which will let you capture a full web page.
1. Online Tools
Here are two online tools that are handy to take a screenshot of a full web page.
Snapito: It’s a free tool for taking screenshots of webpages. Just go to Snapito website and enter the website URL that you want to take a screenshot. And click on Snap.
Screen Capture: This is another awesome tool created by Tech Blogger Amit Agarwal. Screen Capture tool will generate a high quality picture of web page as PNG format. All you need to is visit the site and click on ‘Capture Screenshot’.
2. Chrome Extensions
If you are a Google Chrome user, then you can consider using any of the following extensions.
Awesome Screenshot: This is my personal favorite. I’ve been using this plugin for a while. By using this extension, you can capture the whole web page or any portion. You can also annotate screenshot and blur sensative information.
Webpage Screenshot: This another useful tool for capture entire web page. You can capture vertical or horizontal content apperearing on any webpage on the internet.
If you are using Mozilla Firefox, you can use Webpage Screenshot in Firefox add-on.
3. Desktop Tools
If you want to use an offline tool on your PC, then you can try following those.
PicPick (Windows): PicPick is an useful tool to take screenshots. You can use this tool to take a screenshot of full webpage. But I didn’t find it very useful at the time of taking entire web page screenshot. But it has some awesome features.
Skitch (Mac): If you are using Mac, then you can consider using this popular screenshot tool. Just drag a URL from your onto Skitch and it’ll take screenshot of the entire webpage.
Do let us know which tool you like most for capturing entire webpage screenshot. If you find this post useful, please help me by sharing this post on Facebook, Twitter and Google+.
There are many different ways of taking screenshots in Windows 10 computers. The oldest and the quickest way is to press the ⎙ Print Screen key on the keyboard. It saves a bitmap image of the screen to your clipboard which you can paste in Word, Paint or any image editing software.
You can also use the Snipping tool in Windows to take screenshots. Press the Windows + Shift + S keyboard shortcut to activate the snipping mode. It offers free form snip along with Full screen and Active window screenshots.
However, all these methods only take screenshots of areas visible in the viewport of your screen. You would have to take multiple screenshots when you are capturing a scrollable window, such as web pages which are generally too long to fit within the display’s viewport.
Use the Web Capture feature in Microsoft Edge
The Web Capture feature is inbuilt into Microsoft Edge Browser and you don’t need to install any extensions to activate it. Web Capture in Edge can take a screenshot of the entire web page and saves it as a single image file.
To take screenshots using Web capture; open the web page in the Microsoft Edge browser.
Click on the three dot menu in the top right corner and select Web Capture. You can also press the Ctrl + Shift + S shortcut to activate the Web Capture mode in Edge.
When activated Edge would show the capture mode buttons at the top of the page.
You can either click on the Capture full page to take the screenshot of the entire webpage or click on the Capture area button if you want to select a part of the page for the screenshot.
Clicking on the Capture Full page would open the Web Capture preview window in the current tab. You can click on Save to download the screenshot as a JPEG image file.
To copy the screenshot to your clipboard, click on the three dot icon and then select Copy . You can paste the screenshot in Paint, Word or any image editing app on your computer.
Clicking on Add to collections would save the screenshot within the browser as a Collection.
You can also click on Draw to add annotations or highlight any segment of the screenshot. You can also choose the color and thickness of the highlighter pen.
To send the Screenshot to other devices using Bluetooth or Wi-fi, click on the three dot menu in the Web Capture preview window and then select Share .
Add Web Capture Button to the Edge Toolbar
Adding the Web Capture button to the Edge toolbar makes it easier to take screenshots. To take full page screenshots of any webpage, you can straightaway click the Web Capture button in the toolbar.
To add the button to the toolbar, click on the Edge three dot menu in the top right corner and select Settings. You can also type edge://settings in the address bar and hit Enter , to open Edge settings page.
In the Settings page select Appearance , in the left panel. The Appearance settings would open on the right side.
Scroll down and look for the Show web capture button toggle under the Customize toolbar heading. Toggle it to On.
The Web Capture would appear as an icon on the right side of the Edge’s address bar.