![]() I always tap Yes here because it makes my long screenshots look nicer. This will keep the status bar, tab bar, and other menu elements in the first and last screenshots only. Next, you can choose if you want the header and the footer on the first and last screenshot.Now it’s time to crop the bottom of the screenshots.Repeat the cropping until you’re satisfied and then tap All done with this part. You can choose to crop between 10 and 100 pixels at a time and each time you’ll be shown a preview of what the screenshots will look like after cropping. This allows you to remove the status bar, address bar, or other menu elements and keep only the important parts of any screenshot. First you’ll be cropping the top of all screenshots.You’ll see a preview of one screenshot and you should tap Done to open cropping options. ![]() Now begins the part where you crop the screenshots.Tap Done after selecting the screenshots. This will open your screenshots via the photo picker and you can select all the screenshots you want to stitch.The former keeps the shortcut updated and the latter allows you to save screenshots to iCloud Drive. The shortcut will ask for permission to access Routine Hub and iCloud Drive. Open the Shortcuts app, tap the My Shortcuts tab, and tap Long Screenshots.Take the screenshots you need to stitch into a single image.I’m linking to Routine Hub because it’ll always display the latest version of this shortcut as opposed to the iCloud page which may stop working or have a couple of unpatched bugs. ![]()
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