
The only downside to this approach is that you’ll need to open your screen grab in Preview to crop off the top and bottom parts of the window. The entire frame should be highlighted, so all that’s left to do is click on it.Ī new image file should instantly show up on your Desktop. Press the spacebar and hover over the DVD Player window.Press Command+Tab to switch back to DVD Player without making any clicks. When you hit Enter/Return on your keyboard, the mouse cursor will change from an arrow to crosshairs.Open Terminal (Applications > Utilities) and copy & paste the following command:.Go to the exact frame you want to capture and then pause playback.

If you haven’t already done so, launch DVD Player to play your movie.But while attempts to take a screenshot via normal methods (Command+Shift+3, for example) produce this stern warning, there is a way to get around it.

Please quit DVD Player first.” Ugh… what an inconvenience.

You’ve probably seen the error before: “Screen grabs are unavailable during DVD playback. With a little trickery (or a different video player), that problem can be solved. Due to a limitation which prevents screenshots from being taken while DVD Player is running, grabbing frames from movies is a hassle.
