
All of the images and file links are sourced to the server, so if images or styles change online, the pages won’t render correctly, and I’m left with a less-than-adequate rendition of what we started with…and I really will be digging through to find a better copy. While it’s far more streamlined than any option offering conversion of web pages to images, it only saves the pages as HTML. The first possibility is a Chrome extension, Batch Link Downloader. And so my search begins… Batch Link Downloader (Chrome Extension) We need to make sure as new features are added or software is upgraded we don’t blow up the approved formatting.
#SAVE WEB PAGE LAYERS AS PNG UPDATE#
We’d like to have a copy of these files because as we update the web pages and software regularly. However, it also leaves us without a copy of what the page looked like initially. Hence the switch to building pages directly in WordPress and skipping the mock-ups step is a double win. It’s hard for someone who doesn’t build websites every day to imagine an image as an actual website. Previously, we mocked up each page using graphic design software and shared it with clients as an image, which was great for creativity but not as great for usability.

Here’s the backstory: We build on WordPress, and with the improved page-building features of late, we’ve found we can fairly easily build simple static pages right within the WordPress interface.

Why would I even want to do such a thing? Glad you asked. My quest for today is to figure out a way to save our finished websites as images with the intention of creating a mini of our websites after we take them live. Nonprofit Marketing with Purpose PodcastĪt MayeCreate, we love us some digital marketing tools.Construction Marketing with Purpose Podcast.
