I believe this isn't what is meant by a screen shot. Virtualizing the window picks up only text. A screen shot produces an image of the entire screen, including graphics and anything else that might be there, all in the way the elements relate to each other visually. Juan Pablo's suggestion should do the job. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- From: jfw-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:jfw-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Bill White Sent: Monday, December 13, 2010 9:54 AM To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: Screen Caps with Jaws Hi, Samara. The only way I know to get a screenshot is to use Alt+Insert+W and select the whole screen with CTRL+A. Copy this to the clipboard with CTRL+C. Then copy this into a document of your choice. Once you are done with the vertual window, press escape to get out of the vertual window. Thank you. Bill White billwhite92701@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx ----- Original Message ----- From: Samara Raine To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Sunday, December 12, 2010 9:44 PM Subject: Re: Screen Caps with Jaws Hmmm. How to explain. Screenshot. Every computer's capable of it. I think it's sort of the equivilant to the computer taking a picture of the screen. I know you have to use the print screen key, but I'm not sure if there's anything else I'd need to do jaws-wise to actually shift focus to the proper area I'm trying to capture. Sorry, I'm not the best at explaining it. Someone else might be able to explain it better. ----- Original Message ----- From: Bill White To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Sunday, December 12, 2010 11:36 PM Subject: Re: Screen Caps with Jaws What exactly do you mean by a screen cap? Bill White billwhite92701@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx ----- Original Message ----- From: Samara Raine To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Sunday, December 12, 2010 8:20 PM Subject: Screen Caps with Jaws Hey guys. Using jaws, does anyone know how to create a screen cap?