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Screen Shots 101
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Monday, April 10, 2006
3:00:00 PM EDT
Hearing Steely Dan, Daddy Don't Live in That New York City No More
Hi folks -- hope you all had a pleasant weekend.
I got a question over the weekend from reader Josh who asked me how I make those screen shots (that is, pictures of what's currently on the screen, also called screen grabs or screen captures) that I usually illustrate my "how to" entries with; this comes up from time to time, so I thought I'd list out the steps.
Now, I'm primarily using a PC running Windows XP, so when I want to take a screen shot, this is what I usually do:
1. Hit the "Prt Scr" button (or Print Screen) button on my keyboard. (It's on the top row of function keys, next to your F12 button):
Please disregard the fuzz by the End key. It has since been removed.
2. I switch to the graphics editor program I'm using (usually Photoshop), open a new document, then paste what's stored in my clipboard using the Control-V key combination (Control-V is pretty much the universal keyboard shortcut for "Paste.")
3. Then, I will edit the screenshot as needed; this usually involves cropping and resizing the photo, since by definition, a screenshot is a picture of your screen, so it's going to be pretty big; then I do whatever else I need to, including adding notes, circling things by drawing borders (in Photoshop, a border is called a "stroke" -- it's under the Edit menu), etc.
4. When I'm all done, I upload it to my FTP storage space using the Web-based File Manager, then put it in my Journal (here's how to do all this).
If you take a lot of screenshots, there are a number of freeware and shareware utilities that can make things easier; just do a search on any shareware site.
Also, if you're using Mac OS X, it comes with a utility program called Grab that you can use to take screen shots.
When it comes to editing photos, if you don't have Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro, you can try Microsoft Paint (which comes with every Windows PC), or one ofthe free editing programs I've mentioned before.
In a bit of trivia, I used to highlight things in my screen shots by drawing red boxes around them; when I saw Product Manager Susan doing her screen shots, though, I saw that she used red ovals, which makes more sense -- you don't usually see ovals used in interfaces, so when you circle something, it stands out more.
Hope this helps. Thanks -- Joe
Tag: Screen Shot, How To
Written by journalseditor Blog about this entry
3:00:00 PM EDT
Hearing Steely Dan, Daddy Don't Live in That New York City No More
Screen Shots 101
I got a question over the weekend from reader Josh who asked me how I make those screen shots (that is, pictures of what's currently on the screen, also called screen grabs or screen captures) that I usually illustrate my "how to" entries with; this comes up from time to time, so I thought I'd list out the steps.
Now, I'm primarily using a PC running Windows XP, so when I want to take a screen shot, this is what I usually do:
1. Hit the "Prt Scr" button (or Print Screen) button on my keyboard. (It's on the top row of function keys, next to your F12 button):

Please disregard the fuzz by the End key. It has since been removed.
2. I switch to the graphics editor program I'm using (usually Photoshop), open a new document, then paste what's stored in my clipboard using the Control-V key combination (Control-V is pretty much the universal keyboard shortcut for "Paste.")
3. Then, I will edit the screenshot as needed; this usually involves cropping and resizing the photo, since by definition, a screenshot is a picture of your screen, so it's going to be pretty big; then I do whatever else I need to, including adding notes, circling things by drawing borders (in Photoshop, a border is called a "stroke" -- it's under the Edit menu), etc.
4. When I'm all done, I upload it to my FTP storage space using the Web-based File Manager, then put it in my Journal (here's how to do all this).
If you take a lot of screenshots, there are a number of freeware and shareware utilities that can make things easier; just do a search on any shareware site.
Also, if you're using Mac OS X, it comes with a utility program called Grab that you can use to take screen shots.
When it comes to editing photos, if you don't have Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro, you can try Microsoft Paint (which comes with every Windows PC), or one ofthe free editing programs I've mentioned before.
In a bit of trivia, I used to highlight things in my screen shots by drawing red boxes around them; when I saw Product Manager Susan doing her screen shots, though, I saw that she used red ovals, which makes more sense -- you don't usually see ovals used in interfaces, so when you circle something, it stands out more.
Hope this helps. Thanks -- Joe
Tag: Screen Shot, How To
Written by journalseditor Blog about this entry
This entry has 7 comments: (Add your own)
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Hi Joe On journals when looking at other peoples pictures ,when I click on to view larger,I get the photograph ,with a black background but always with the bottom of the picture missing ......Jan xx http://journals.aol.co.uk/jea
die05/Serendipity/ -
Far better than my last attempts at getting images from the screen - emailed it, enlarged it, photographed it with the camera on the screen, uploaded to the laptop, resized it and then to the website. Gotta laugh.
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Wow - amazing leap forward. Love the technical stuff. Never used that button before. On an unrelated note - what's the sys rq part of it all about? (A bit behind the times).....
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On a MAC I use the apple key,shift key & #3 at the same time & it takes a snap shot (PDF file)of your desktop & saves it to your desktop. IN Photoshop, I open the file & edit/crop it.
These is a way to do it on the PC, but I forgot.

4/13/06 1:00 AM