How to Screenshot Anything on Any Device — Stop Taking Pictures of Your Screen
My mom sent me a photo of her computer screen — taken with her phone — to show me an error message. The photo was tilted. There was a reflection of the window. I could barely read the text. I called her and taught her the screenshot shortcut in 30 seconds.
If you have ever taken a photo of your screen with your phone, this one is for you.
The Shortcuts You Will Actually Remember
| Device | Shortcut | Where It Saves |
|---|---|---|
| Windows | Win + Shift + S | Clipboard + notification |
| Mac | Cmd + Shift + 4 | Desktop (or clipboard with + Ctrl) |
| iPhone | Side + Volume Up | Photos app |
| Android | Power + Volume Down | Photos/Google Photos |
| Chromebook | Ctrl + Show Windows | Files > Downloads |
Bonus: How to Screenshot Just Part of the Screen
- Windows: Win + Shift + S, then drag to select the area. It copies to clipboard — paste with Ctrl + V.
- Mac: Cmd + Shift + 4, then drag. Add Control to copy to clipboard instead of saving.
- iPhone/iPad: Take a full screenshot, then tap the thumbnail that appears in the corner to crop it before saving.
- Android: Some phones show a “scroll capture” or “long screenshot” button after taking a screenshot — tap it to capture an entire webpage.

My mom now sends crisp, clean screenshots. She is unreasonably proud of this skill and brings it up at family dinners. Worth the 30-second phone call.
📋 Quick Summary: Win+Shift+S (Windows), Cmd+Shift+4 (Mac), Side+Vol Up (iPhone), Power+Vol Down (Android). Never take a photo of your screen again.