Designers waste hours describing visual issues in Slack threads. Highlite lets you annotate live websites with the same precision you expect from Figma comments. Mark inconsistent spacing, point at misaligned components, and ship feedback developers can act on immediately.
The pain UI/UX designers face today
- Slack screenshots lose context the moment they leave your screen
- Figma comments stop at the design — the live site has different bugs
- Describing visual issues in text doubles your review time
- Stakeholders ignore feedback when it lacks visual anchors
How designers use Highlite
Open the staging URL in your browser
No screenshot tools, no exports — annotate the real page.
Highlight spacing issues, misaligned elements, wrong colors
Use color-coded highlights to categorize critical vs polish issues.
Drop sticky notes with rationale and references
Link back to Figma frames or design tokens for context.
Screenshot the annotated page and share in Slack
Devs see exactly what you see — no back-and-forth.
Features that matter most
Designers cut feedback cycles in half by replacing written bug reports with annotated screenshots.
Other roles using Highlite
For Developers
Reproduce visual bugs faster with annotated screenshots. Highlite turns vague QA reports into actionable tickets with precise visual context — no setup, no tooling.
For QA Testers
Catch visual regressions and document UI bugs developers love. Annotate live pages directly in your browser — no screenshot editor needed.
For Students
Highlight textbooks, online courses, and research articles directly in your browser. Color-code by topic, add sticky notes for revision, and study smarter.