Clipboard Image Batch Saver

Paste screenshots & clipboard images one by one with Ctrl+V / Cmd+V, set a naming rule, then download all as a single ZIP — no upload, fully in-browser.

Naming rule

Example filename: shot_001.png
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Click here, then press Ctrl+V / Cmd+V to paste a clipboard image
— or drag & drop image files onto this area —
No images yet. Paste or drop images above.

How it works

1Copy an imageTake a screenshot (⌘⇧4 / PrtScn), right-click an image in a browser, or copy any image to your clipboard.
2Paste into this pageClick the paste zone and press Ctrl+V / Cmd+V. The image appears as a thumbnail. Repeat for each screenshot.
3Rename if neededEach thumbnail has an editable filename. Adjust individual names inline without breaking the sequence of the others.
4Download all as ZIPClick Download ZIP. JSZip packs all images client-side and your browser downloads one .zip file instantly.

All processing happens entirely in your browser. Images never leave your device.

Frequently asked questions

Why use this instead of saving screenshots one by one?
When you have many screenshots — from a bug report session, a tutorial walkthrough, or a design review — saving them individually means navigating Save dialogs over and over, then manually zipping. This tool lets you paste everything in one go, apply a consistent naming rule automatically, and download a single ZIP file with one click. It's especially handy when you want screenshots numbered sequentially (shot_001.png, shot_002.png…) for documentation or hand-offs.
What image formats are supported? Will the ZIP contain PNG or JPEG files?
Whatever the clipboard gives you is what gets saved. Screenshots from macOS (⌘⇧4) and Windows (PrtScn / Snipping Tool) arrive as PNG. Images copied from a browser or app may arrive as PNG or JPEG depending on the source. Each file is saved in its original format with the appropriate extension (.png or .jpg). If the browser cannot determine the type, it defaults to .png.
Does this work on mobile (iPhone / Android)?
Clipboard paste via Ctrl+V is a desktop interaction, so the paste zone is most useful on a Mac or Windows PC. On mobile you can still add images via the drag-and-drop area if your browser supports it, or by tapping the zone and using the OS share sheet. The download and ZIP creation work on all modern browsers including Safari on iOS 16+ and Chrome on Android.