Capturing pages
Full-page Screenshots
Capture a long, scrolling web page in one shot with Web Snapper — smart scroll-stitching saves clean PNGs or searchable PDFs with no ghosting.
Most screenshot tools only grab what fits on your screen. Web Snapper captures the entire page — header to footer, no matter how far it scrolls — in a single, seamless image.
Capture a full page
- Open the page you want to capture.
- Click the Web Snapper icon.
- Choose the full-page capture.
- Save the result.
That's it. Web Snapper scrolls the page for you, captures it in pieces, and stitches everything back together into one continuous image.
Smart scroll-stitching
Long pages don't fit in the browser viewport, so Web Snapper walks down the page and captures it section by section. It then aligns and joins those sections into a single image — a process we call scroll-stitching.
You don't have to scroll, screenshot, and paste things together by hand. Web Snapper handles the whole sequence and hands you one finished capture.
No ghosting or duplicated content
Sticky headers, floating chat bubbles, and "back to top" bars are the usual reason stitched screenshots look broken: because they stay pinned on screen as the page scrolls, naive tools capture them again and again, leaving duplicated strips down the image.
Web Snapper automatically detects and hides these sticky and floating elements while it captures, so the final image reads like the real page — no repeated headers, no ghosted toolbars, no duplicated content.
Save as PNG or PDF
Once the page is captured, you can save it as:
- PNG — a pixel-perfect image, ideal for sharing or dropping into a document.
- Searchable PDF — the same full-page capture as a PDF, with text that stays selectable and searchable and links that remain clickable.
Pick PNG when you want an image, and PDF when you want a portable document you can search later.
Related
- Only need part of the page? See Region & Visible-area Capture.
- Capturing a panel that scrolls on its own? See Inner-scroll Capture.
- Everything runs on your device — read the Web Snapper privacy policy.