Winshot: The Open-Source Windows Screenshot Tool You Didn't Know You Needed
Let's be honest: taking screenshots on Windows is a solved problem, right? Snipping Tool, Snip & Sketch, or a dozen third-party apps. But if you've ever needed to quickly annotate a bug, highlight a UI element for documentation, or share a precise part of your screen with a colleague, you know the workflow can feel clunky. You take the screenshot, open an editor, add your arrows and boxes, save it, and then share it. It's fine, but it's not smooth.
Enter Winshot. It's a new open-source tool that aims to streamline that entire process into one fluid motion. Built for developers, designers, and anyone who communicates with screenshots, it combines capturing, annotating, and exporting into a single, keyboard-driven tool. It's the kind of utility that quietly becomes an indispensable part of your daily toolkit.
What It Does
Winshot is a lightweight, portable Windows application. You trigger it with a global hotkey, select an area of your screen, and immediately enter an annotation mode. From there, you can draw shapes, add arrows, blur sensitive info, and type text directly onto the capture. When you're done, you can copy the final image to your clipboard or save it directly to a file—all without ever leaving the flow of your work.
Why It's Cool
The magic of Winshot is in its simplicity and focus. It doesn't try to be a full-fledged image editor. Instead, it's laser-focused on the "capture-and-comment" workflow that so many of us use daily.
- Instant Annotation: The moment you release your selection rectangle, the annotation toolbar appears. There's no separate mode or app switch.
- Developer-Friendly Output: Copying the image to your clipboard means you can instantly paste it into GitHub issues, Slack, or documentation. It respects your need for quick sharing.
- Portable & Lightweight: It's a single
.exefile. No installer, no system modifications. You can run it from a USB drive or a folder on your desktop without a fuss. - Open Source: Being on GitHub means you can see how it's built, contribute to it, or tweak it for your own needs. It's a tool made by a developer, for developers.
How to Try It
Getting started is straightforward. Head over to the Winshot GitHub repository. On the main page, you'll find the latest release. Just download the winshot.exe file from the Assets section and run it. That's it—no installation needed.
Once it's running (you'll see it in your system tray), the default capture hotkey is Ctrl + Shift + A. You can change this in the settings if it conflicts with something else. Give it a try: hit the hotkey