There are several ways to capture Windows screens; How to Screenshot on Windows 11.
What to Know about Screenshot on Windows 11
- PrtSc screenshots the entire screen, saves to clipboard.
- Win+PrtSc auto-saves fullscreen screenshots to Pictures > Screenshots.
- Win+Shift+S lets you pick a window or section of the screen.
This article explains all the different ways you can screenshot in Windows 11.
Use PrtSc to Screenshot the Whole Screen
There are many ways to make screenshots in Windows 11, the most basic being to use the PrtSc button on your keyboard. This captures the entire screen, including multiple displays if you have them, plus all visible windows, the taskbar and Start button, etc. You can then paste the screenshot into any program that supports image pasting.
However, there are several better ways to take a screenshot, depending on what you’re capturing and how you want to save it. Most methods require you to memorize some keyboard shortcuts, but there’s also a tool built-in to Windows 11 to help with taking screenshots.
On some computers, the Fn (function) key needs to be pressed along with PrtSc.
Fullscreen Screenshot and Auto-save to Folder
Win+PrtSc
This method is super useful if you’re taking lots of screenshots. Press and hold the Windows key and then press the PrtSc key on your keyboard.
The fullscreen screenshot will save to your Pictures > Screenshots folder. One way to navigate to that folder is to quickly search for folders: screenshot.
Screenshot on Windows 11 Part of the Screen
Win+Shift+S
This three-button shortcut triggers a snipping tool much more useful than PrtSc on its own. It still lets you screenshot the whole screen, but there are also three other techniques you can use.
After striking those three keys together, the screen will dim and a small menu will show at the very top of the screen. There are four buttons which let you take different kinds of screenshots. Here’s how to use them:
- Rectangular Snip: You simply draw a box which contains what you’d like to capture. You would use this method to essentially screenshot a smaller part of the screen (and ignore the rest).
- Freeform Snip: You simply draw a shape which contains what you’d like to capture. This is useful if the rectangular snip is too restrictive to capture what you need.
- Window Snip: This allows you to capture the image of an open window. This is identical to the rectangular snip but lets you avoid needing a steady hand to get just that one window; it will automatically screenshot just one window without the taskbar, etc.
- Fullscreen Snip: Press to capture the whole screen. It’s identical to using PrtScr.
After choosing one of those options, the image will be saved to the clipboard where you can then paste into an email or some other program that accepts pasting pictures. Or, if you select the prompt that pops up at the bottom of the screen after taking the screenshot, it’ll open in Snip & Sketch which has
After choosing one of those options, the image will be saved to the clipboard where you can then paste into an email or some other program that accepts pasting pictures.
Or, if you select the prompt that pops up at the bottom of the screen after taking the screenshot, it’ll open in Snip & Sketch. In Snip & Sketch are markup tools like a pencil and highlighter. You can also easily print the screenshot and save it as not only PNG but also JPG or GIF.
Delayed Screenshots With Snip & Sketch
Pull up the search button from the taskbar and enter Snip & Sketch to open the app. This tool was briefly covered above, but what we’ll look at now is the delayed screenshot function.
Taking screenshots of open menus and other areas of Windows can sometimes be difficult if triggering the screenshot breaks whatever it is you’re doing. Snip & Sketch has a timed screenshot option so you can do what you need to and then wait for the screenshot to happen automatically, hands-free.
With the program open, select the arrow next to New. There are two options: Snip in 3 seconds and Snip in 10 seconds. Select one and then quickly arrange the screen how you need it for the screenshot. When the time you chose is reached, the four options mentioned above will display at the top of the screen.
Tips for Taking Screenshot on Windows 11
- Once an image is loaded in Snip & Sketch, use the crop tool to further define which part of it you want to keep, without needing to retake the screenshot.
- If your desktop wallpaper includes colors or shapes, it sometimes shows through in the screenshot. You can avoid this by setting the wallpaper to all white.
- Create an outline around your screenshots created with Snip & Sketch by opening Snip & Sketch’s settings and enabling Snip outline. You can choose any border color you like.
- If your window screenshots need to be a specific height and width, the free Sizer tool can resize the window before you capture the screenshot.
- There are screenshot apps you can use instead. One reason you might want a dedicated app for taking screenshots is for increased capability. There’s a screenshot app, for example, which lets you take a screenshot of an entire web page, something you can’t do with the above steps.
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