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A screenshot nobody has to ask "which page, which screen, when?" about.

Frameshot is a free browser screenshot tool for Chrome. One click captures the page and stamps it with the URL, timestamp and viewport size, then lets you annotate it. Screenshot with URL and timestamp, ready to send.

Add to Chrome, it's free

Free. No account. Nothing ever leaves your browser.

A screenshot with no context raises more questions than it answers.

Nobody can tell which page it was

A bare image lands in the chat and the reply is always the same: which URL is this, and what size was the window? Without that, the person on the other end cannot reproduce what you saw.

Cropping and labelling by hand is slow

Capture, open an editor, crop, type the URL, add the date, draw an arrow, export. Do that ten times in a review and the afternoon is gone, most of it on admin rather than the actual feedback.

Scrappy evidence undermines the point

An unlabelled, unstamped screenshot in a client report looks like a guess. The work might be right, but the presentation invites doubt instead of settling it.

What Frameshot does

One-click capture

Click the toolbar button and Frameshot grabs the current page. No region-drawing ritual before you can start, no dialog to wade through: capture first, tidy up after.

Browser toolbar with the Frameshot button and a capture of the current page appearing ready to edit.

Auto-stamp URL, time and viewport

Every capture is stamped with the page URL, the date and time, and the viewport size. The context travels with the image, so a shot means the same thing a week later as it did the moment you took it.

A captured page with a footer strip showing the full URL, a timestamp and the viewport dimensions in pixels.

Annotate with arrows, boxes and text

Point at the broken button, box off the misaligned section, add a line of text, all before you save. The feedback and the evidence stay in one image, so there is nothing to explain separately.

Annotation toolbar with arrow, box and text tools, and a red arrow pointing at a form field on the capture.

Images stay on your device

Nothing is uploaded. Frameshot captures, stamps and annotates in the browser and saves the file to your machine, so client sites and internal screens never leave your control.

Save dialog putting the finished, stamped screenshot straight into a local downloads folder, no upload step.
Add to Chrome, it's free

Three steps, none of them an image editor

  1. Install: add Frameshot from the Chrome Web Store in a couple of clicks.
  2. Capture: open any page and click once; the stamp is added for you.
  3. Annotate and save: mark it up if you need to, then save the file to your device.

Your captures stay yours

Frameshot works entirely in your browser. It captures the page, stamps it and saves it on your device, and that is the whole of it.

No account, no sign-up, nothing uploaded. The pages you shoot, client sites included, never leave your machine.

The full details are in the privacy policy, which is short, because there is not much to disclose.

Who it's for

Freelancers and agencies

You are documenting a client's site before a redesign: capture twenty pages, each stamped with its URL and the date, and hand over evidence nobody can question the provenance of.

QA and bug reporting

You found a layout bug at a specific width: one capture carries the URL, the timestamp and the viewport size, so the developer can reproduce it without a back-and-forth.

Designers capturing references

You are collecting patterns from around the web: every reference arrives stamped with its source URL, so your moodboard never loses track of where an idea came from.

FAQ

Is Frameshot really free?

Yes. Capturing screenshots, stamping them and annotating them are all free, with no account and no sign-up. There is no paid tier and no feature is held back.

Where do my screenshots go?

Onto your device. Frameshot captures and stamps the image in your browser and saves it locally. Nothing is uploaded to a server, ours or anyone else's, and there is no cloud gallery to sign in to.

What gets stamped on the screenshot?

The page URL, the date and time of capture, and the viewport size. That gives every shot the context it needs on its own: which page, which screen width, and exactly when, without you typing a caption.

Can I annotate the capture?

Yes. You can add arrows, boxes and text before you save, so you can point at the button that is broken or circle the layout that is off without opening a separate image editor.

Does it work on any website?

It captures the page you are viewing in Chrome. Open the site, click capture, and you get a stamped screenshot of what is on screen, ready to annotate and save.

Add to Chrome, it's free

Thirty seconds to install. A lot faster than captioning screenshots by hand.

Built by NUVIX

NUVIX builds focused, free tools for marketers and makers: small, sharp and doing one job properly. Frameshot captures the evidence; its siblings handle the rest of the workflow.

Need hands-on help with your marketing setup? Get in touch: info@nuvix.studio