This will save a copy of the image on your phone. Depending on your phone, you might have to crop the saved image later. Identify the image file. Then, tap the three dots displayed. Then, email it to yourself. Tap on the link, then go the post.
You should be able to select View Page Source by pressing on it. A new tab will open—which displays lots of code! Use a keyword search by typing. This narrows the code down to the image file. Copy the entire line of text. This will pull up nothing but the image. Display and downloading might be easier. This is particularly true if you hate working around a tiny screen and keyboard.
Whether you choose a phone or a computer, there are still downsides. There are lots of ways to save photos to your computer. You can always screenshot and crop it later. Pick your favorite web browser and log into your Instagram account. Then, click the gear icon.
This should take you to Privacy and Security. Once you click on this, you should see a page entitled Account Privacy. Because Instagram is owned by Facebook, users have the option to download their data. This is a copy of all their messages, posts, videos, and more. Instagram has all the same data available as an option to download as well. Click on it to request a download. Confirm your identity. Bear in mind that some of these require access to your account data, while others rely on heavy advertising to make their money.
That may inspire more trust in terms of security. It can be used on both computers and mobiles. The downside is that you can only download one piece of media at a time. On a desktop computer, go to the Instagram website, find the picture you want, click on the three dots at the top right above the image and choose 'Go to Post'. Click the Download button, then the Download image button to save your image. On a mobile device, open the Instagram app and find the photo you want, tap the three dots icon and choose 'copy link'.
From there, follow the process as above. Other options include FastSave for Instagram , which offers a faster app-based option for downloading individual images to an Android phone with no copying or pasting needed, but you need to grant the app access to your data, and the ads can be annoying. Two of the most popular options are 4K Stogram and Save-o-gram. Download and install 4K Stogram on your computer, open the programme then type an Instagram username, hashtag, or location into the search bar.
Click Subscribe, then the programme will search and automatically start downloading everything it finds. If you need to be more selective, Save-o-gram allows selected images to be downloaded all at once as a zip file or individually. Just click on the three vertical dots at the bottom right of the story and choose 'Save photo'. You can find old stories by going to your profile, clicking on the menu icon and selecting 'Archive'.
See our guide to Instagram Stories here. The trick is to hold down one finger on the screen while you do so in order to remove the Instagram UI and get a clean shot. Just tap and hold anywhere on the screen so that the UI overlay fades away. This also pauses the story, giving you time to take the screenshot. Joseph is a regular freelance journalist at Creative Bloq. He also works as a writer and translator, as well as a project manager at a design agency based in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where he spends his nights dancing tango and drinking malbec.
His interests include graphic design and social media. This will bring the photo up in its preview modal, floating on top of the person's newsfeed, like this:. Notice that the URL in Chrome's address bar has changed. Instead of saying the person's Instagram username, it will now say instagram.
Every photo on Instagram has its own dedicated web address, and if you go directly to that address, it will just show the one photo without all the other photos in their newsfeed. Right-click the photo and choose "Inspect" from the dropdown. This will open up Chrome's developer console. Even though Chrome DevTools are designed for software developers, don't be intimidated.
You just need to click on a few specific buttons in order to find the photo. Each photo is stored within its own folder. Start expanding these folders and you'll eventually find the full-sized photo. Right click the file and click "open in new tab. This way, you will get the full-sized Instagram photo - the same photo that Instagram shows you in the Instagram mobile app. This isn't a screenshot or a thumbnail - this is the full-sized image. Instagram wants for you to link back to their website instead of being able to link to the image directly.
But Instagram doesn't own these images - you or whoever took the photo owns it.
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