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Full Page Screenshot — Scroll & Stitch in Chrome

Capture an entire scrolling page in Chrome as one image. Fixed and sticky headers handled right — no repeated bars, no blank sections. Free, no account.

Updated

You need the whole page in one image: a long article, a full checkout flow, a dashboard that runs three screens deep. Chrome’s built-in screenshot only grabs what’s currently on screen. Stitching it together by hand is tedious, and many browser extensions that promise a full-page capture get the hard parts wrong: a header bar repeated a dozen times down the image, or a gray blank where a lazy-loaded section never finished rendering.

SuperchargeCapture’s Full page mode handles both. It scrolls the page in viewport-height steps, captures each slice, and assembles them into a single tall image, then cleans up the two artifacts that ruin long screenshots elsewhere.

How Scroll-and-Stitch Works

Browsers only ever render what fits in the viewport, so capturing a page that’s taller than your screen means moving through it in pieces. Full page mode scrolls down one viewport height at a time, takes a shot at each stop, and joins the pieces edge to edge. Because it scrolls the actual page rather than reading a single frame, content that loads on demand (images, comments, infinite-feed sections) gets a moment to appear before its slice is captured. That’s the difference between a complete capture and one with a blank rectangle two-thirds of the way down.

The result is one image you can save, copy, annotate, or export to PDF, with no manual stitching and no missing strips.

Fixed and Sticky Headers, Handled Right

This is where most full-page tools fall apart. A header set to position: fixed or position: sticky stays glued to the top of the viewport no matter how far you scroll. A tool that just snaps each viewport and stacks the results captures that header at every single step — so your finished screenshot shows the navigation bar repeated all the way down, sometimes covering the content underneath it.

SuperchargeCapture detects fixed and sticky elements as it stitches and freezes them in place, so the header is captured once, at the top, where it actually belongs. Pages with multiple scroll containers are a common reason competing tools guess the wrong region and capture the wrong thing. SuperchargeCapture targets the right container instead of assuming the page body always scrolls.

Four Capture Modes, Not Just One

Full page is the headline, but it’s one of four ways to capture:

ModeWhat it grabsBest for
Full pageThe entire scrolling page, stitchedLong articles, dashboards, full flows
VisibleOne instant shot of the current viewportQuick grabs of what’s on screen
RegionA rectangle you drag aroundAn exact crop without editing after
ElementA single DOM node you hover and clickOne card, table, or chart, cleanly

Region and Element are precision modes that scroll-and-stitch tools like GoFullPage simply don’t offer. If you only want one table out of a busy page, you grab just that table instead of capturing everything and cropping.

Formats and the Editor

Save as PNG, JPG, or WebP, or send a long multi-section capture straight to PDF for archiving. Every capture opens in the built-in editor, where you can crop with aspect-ratio presets and annotate with arrows, boxes, ellipses, highlights, text, and a pixelate tool to blur anything sensitive before the image leaves your screen. Unlike GoFullPage, which paywalls the export of annotated images, all of that is free.

Privacy

The capture is assembled and stored entirely on your device, in the browser’s private file system. There’s no account to create, no telemetry, and no server in the loop. Nothing about the page you captured — its URL, its contents, anything — is transmitted unless you deliberately choose to share the image yourself.

Questions? Reach out at support@superchargebrowser.com.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does a full page screenshot capture content below the fold?
SuperchargeCapture scrolls the page in viewport-height steps, takes a shot at each position, and stitches the pieces into one tall image. Because it scrolls the real page, lazy-loaded images and sections get a chance to load before they're captured — which is why they don't come out blank the way single-pass tools leave them.
Why do other extensions repeat the header bar in long screenshots?
Fixed and sticky headers stay pinned to the viewport as the page scrolls, so a naive tool captures them again at every step and the final image shows the bar stacked over and over. SuperchargeCapture detects fixed and sticky elements during the stitch and freezes them, so the header appears once at the top where it belongs.
What image formats can I save a full page screenshot in?
PNG, JPG, and WebP. Multi-section full-page captures can also be exported to PDF from the built-in editor, which is handy for archiving a long article or a receipt as a single document. As of June 2026 all four output options are free, with no export paywall.
Can I capture just part of a page instead of the whole thing?
Yes. Alongside Full page, there's Visible (one instant shot of the current viewport), Region (drag a rectangle around exactly what you want), and Element (hover to highlight a DOM node, then click to grab only that block). Full page is one of four capture modes.
Does the full page screenshot get uploaded anywhere?
No. The capture is assembled locally and stays on your device in the browser's private storage. There's no account, no telemetry, and nothing is sent to SuperchargeBrowser or anyone else unless you explicitly choose to share it.

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