If you work with front-end code, you've been here: you're inspecting a website, you need an asset (an image, an SVG icon, a color value) and suddenly you're 14 clicks deep in DevTools, hunting through the Elements panel, copying inline styles by hand, or right-clicking "Save As" on images that turn out to be 47px thumbnails.
I built MiroMiro because I got tired of this workflow. It's a Chrome extension that lets you inspect any website and extract what you actually need, in one click.
Here's what it does and why 6,000+ developers have installed it.
Export Any Image in One Click
Hover over any image on a page. Click. Download.
No more right-click → Save Image As.
MiroMiro detects all images on the page. One click.
Copy & Paste SVGs Instantly
This one was a personal pain point.
With MiroMiro, you hover over any SVG, click copy, and it's on your clipboard. Clean, ready to paste into your code or Figma.
You can also bulk-export every SVG on a page at once. Handy when you're studying how a site structures its icon system.
Extract Design Tokens From Any Site
Ever land on a site and think "I love this color palette" or "what font is that?" MiroMiro extracts the full design token set from any page:
- Colors - every color used on the page, organized and ready to copy as HEX, RGB, or HSL
- Typography - font families, sizes, weights, and line heights as actually rendered
- Spacing - padding and margin values from any element
No more eyeballing colors in a screenshot or guessing font sizes. You get the real values, extracted directly from the computed styles.
Extract Sections to Code
See a section on a website you want to study or reference? MiroMiro lets you select any section and extract its HTML and CSS, giving you a clean starting point instead of copying spaghetti from DevTools.
This isn't about cloning sites. It's about learning. When I was starting out, I learned more from reading real production CSS than from any tutorial.
MiroMiro makes that process frictionless.
Extract Lottie Animations
If a site uses Lottie animations, MiroMiro detects and lets you export the JSON files directly. Normally you'd have to dig through network requests to find these. Now they surface automatically.
Why I Built This
I'm a front-end developer. I was spending way too much time on repetitive inspection tasks that DevTools makes unnecessarily painful. The browser's built-in tools are powerful but they're built for debugging, not for design extraction.
MiroMiro is the tool I wanted every time I thought "I just want to grab that asset." No accounts, no setup. Install the extension and it works on any site.
It hit #2 on Product Hunt, got a Chrome Web Store Featured badge, and has grown to 6,000+ installs entirely through organic growth.
If you try it, I'd love to hear what you think. MiroMiro
This article was originally published by DEV Community and written by Soraia.
Read original article on DEV Community



