How to screenshot one element on a web page (below the fold too)
To screenshot one element of a web page, use Rendry's Element capture (Pro): pick "Capture element" in the popup, hover the part you want, and click — Rendry saves just that element as a clean image, including any part of it that scrolls below the fold, instead of capturing the whole page.
How do I screenshot just one element of a page?
Open the page, click the Rendry icon, and choose Capture element. As you move your cursor, Rendry highlights whatever sits under it — a card, a chart, a pricing table, a single comment — so you can see exactly what you're about to grab. Click to confirm, and you get a tight, cropped image of only that element with nothing else around it.
Because you're selecting the real element rather than dragging a loose box, the edges line up perfectly every time. No squinting at a freehand rectangle, no re-cropping in an editor afterwards.
How do I capture an element that runs below the fold?
This is where a single-element capture beats an ordinary visible-area screenshot. If the element is taller than your screen — a long form, a full comparison table, an entire pricing tier list, a chat thread — Rendry captures the whole element top to bottom, including the part scrolled out of view. You don't have to scroll, stitch, or take several shots and join them.
You just pick the element once. Rendry handles the height for you and hands back one clean image of the complete component, however far it extends past the bottom of the window.
What can I use a single-element capture for?
Grabbing one element keeps your screenshots focused and on-message. It's ideal for pulling a single component into a spec, a moodboard, a slide, or a design review without the surrounding page chrome getting in the way — and for sharing exactly the thing you mean, nothing more.
Like everything in Rendry, element capture runs entirely on your machine, so the component you're sharing never leaves your device.
- Designers and product teams — clip one card, hero, or section for a spec or moodboard, then pair it with extracted design tokens to rebuild it.
- QA and support — show the one broken component in a bug report instead of a noisy full-page shot.
- Writers and marketers — capture a clean, self-contained screenshot of a feature, quote, or table for docs, decks, and social posts.
Frequently asked questions
Can I screenshot a single element instead of the whole page?
Yes. Rendry's Element capture (Pro) lets you click one element — a card, a table, a chart, a section — and saves just that, cropped tight to its edges. You skip the surrounding page entirely and skip re-cropping afterwards, because you're selecting the real element rather than drawing a rough box.
Does element capture include parts that are scrolled off-screen?
Yes, and that's the main advantage over a normal visible-area screenshot. If the element is taller than your window — a long form or a full table — Rendry captures it top to bottom, including everything below the fold, as one clean image. No scrolling, stitching, or joining multiple shots.
Is capturing one element free in Rendry?
Element capture is a Pro feature, included in the $2/month plan with a 7-day free trial. Full-page PNG and PDF capture, automatic clean-up of banners and popups, and the built-in editor with crop and copy are free forever, so you can capture whole pages without paying.
How is element capture different from cropping a full-page screenshot?
Cropping starts from a whole-page image and trims it down by hand, so you guess at the edges. Element capture selects the actual component first, then captures only it — edges aligned automatically, including any part below the fold — so the result is precise without manual cropping or stitching.
Does element capture send my screenshot anywhere?
No. Like every Rendry feature, element capture runs entirely in your browser, on your own device. The captured component never leaves your machine. The only network request Rendry ever makes is a licence check that confirms your subscription — never your page content or images.