
MiroMiro
Copy any website's design & assets in one click
896 followers
Copy any website's design & assets in one click
896 followers
The fastest way to copy any website's design. MiroMiro is a Chrome extension that lets you inspect and extract design assets from any website without opening DevTools. Hover over any element to instantly copy its CSS, colors, fonts, and spacing. Download images, SVGs, and even Lottie animations with one click. Extract design tokens and export them as Tailwind config or CSS variables. Built for designers and developers who want to stop rebuilding from scratch and start shipping faster.








Hey @soraiadev I've tried myself and I'm really impressed.
The inspector is really cool, it's super useful, and the feature that I love the most is the assets fetching. It's very normal to me to browse websites and want to retrieve some images for figma mockups, and MiroMiro makes this super easy, I just go to the assets tab, search the one I want, and download it!
Hope you're really successful with this, it's a great tool!
Amazing, Soraia! as a business user, was tired of taking screen shots to share with designers.
MiroMiro
@arunsview Thank you a lot! I'm glad MiroMiro is useful for you!
@soraiadev Congratulations on making it the top 2!
Yeahh! It's super cool Soraia. I've spent many years taking the best of different websites and now you're making it so easy. Hope many founders can see the same. All the best here!
MiroMiro
@german_merlo1 Thank you so much Germán, hopefully more founders see the same as you do :)
As someone who's building my first app, I use MiroMiro a lot to design &/ sketch how I want it to look like. It's fast and easy to-use, my fav feature is color palettes extraction that can be done within a few clicks!!
Hey @soraiadev, great launch and good luck with a product!
MiroMiro
@nicklaunches Thank you a lot for the support :D
MiroMiro
@dubd59 Thank you so so much!
Triforce Todos
This is such a real problem. Digging through DevTools for small style details gets tiring fast. Hover and copy sounds way more natural. Just curious how often you use this in a normal workday?