Supaste is a local-first clipboard and screenshot history app for Mac. Save copied text, links, images, files, code, colors, and screenshots in a beautiful searchable timeline.
Hey
I built Supaste because I kept losing useful things I copied throughout the day — links, screenshots, code snippets, colors, assets, email templates, and random text I needed again 10 minutes later.
Most clipboard managers felt either too plain or too messy for my workflow, so I wanted to make something more visual, fast, and easy to reuse.
Supaste is a local-first clipboard and screenshot history app for macOS. It saves what you copy into a beautiful visual timeline, lets you filter by app or content type, organize clips into custom categories, drag and drop items back into other apps, and paste recent clips instantly with shortcuts.
It’s built for people who copy a lot while working — designers, developers, marketers, founders, sales/support teams, and anyone who wants their Mac to remember what they copied.
A few things I focused on:
• Visual history instead of a plain list
• App and type filters
• Custom categories for projects, templates, and assets
• Quick Paste from anywhere
• Drag and drop from the notch/window
• Local-first, no cloud sync, no analytics
• One-time purchase, no subscription
I’d love to hear your feedback, ideas, and feature requests.
Thanks for checking out Supaste
I just realized that my screenshot app doesn’t have a history feature, and that would actually be really useful :)
By the way, can you create a screenshot as a shareable link?
now that humans are simply copy pasters for the great AI, this tool will come in handy
the clipboard manager space has Raycast, Paste, and Maccy all doing versions of this. curious what you found lacking in those that made building Supaste worth the time. the beautiful timeline is a UX difference but is there something functional that the existing tools don't do or is this primarily a design and experience play. asking because the answer changes who this is actually for
Congrats on the launch!
I've always wondered why we didnt have like CMD + C + 1,2,3 and you could have multiple copy clipboards stored!
Wouldn't that be awesome?
Love this idea deff going to check it out!
clipboard managers live or die on how they treat the pasteboard's concealed types — password apps mark items org.nspasteboard.ConcealedType so they don't get logged. do you honor that and skip them automatically? that's the detail that decides whether i trust one.
@soltwagner Thanks for sharing what you've been creating! I'm looking forward to trying this app in my design work.
I'm curious about temporary storage and memory usage. If video files or sets of large images are copied to the clipboard using this app, does the summed size of the files put strain on available memory that would normally not keep more than a single item on the clipboard?
Honestly like the app, but the price is a turn off. I can see where if a person truly cared about local only how this could be enticing, but more than half my copy pasting is between devices. Could there be an alternative to cloud where it integrates with a local self hosted option as the clipboard?
This is one of those tools I can immediately imagine using during a messy building day. When I’m working on product copy, small design details, support replies, screenshots, links, colors, and random snippets, I constantly copy things that I know I’ll need again… and then somehow lose them five minutes later.
I like that Supaste treats clipboard history more visually, not just as a long technical list. The local-first part also matters a lot for this kind of app, because clipboard history can easily include private product stuff, emails, credentials, or unfinished drafts.
The one-time purchase is refreshing too. :))
Curious how you think about search: is it mostly exact text search, or can it also help find things more loosely, like “that screenshot from the dashboard” or “the blue color I copied yesterday”?
@soltwagner The visual timeline approach feels like the right fix for clipboard managers that turn into unreadable text dumps after an hour of deep work.
Curious if the app-level filtering works reliably with Electron apps like Figma or VS Code, since they often report generic window titles instead of meaningful context?
That’s usually where visual clipboard tools start to lose their edge over plain lists.
Local-first with a timeline that spans text, images, code, colors, and files in one searchable store is the hard part. Most clipboard managers pick one content type and add the others as an afterthought. I've hit the same mixed-type indexing tradeoffs when handling diverse data in a unified store. Do you use Core Data, SQLite, or something else for the local persistence layer?
Clean, native-feeling clipboard managers are weirdly rare on macOS, so this is welcome! Congrats on launching. Does history sync across devices, or stay local for privacy?
As someone constantly juggling UTM parameters, ad copy variants, and brand hex codes, this looks like a massive lifesaver. Does Supaste allow you to pin or organize specific clippings into folders/tags for different campaigns?
That's a clean take. Is cross-device sync on the roadmap, or is it intentionally local-only?
I feel like every few years I convince myself I don't need a clipboard manager, and then spend the next week re-copying the same links, snippets, screenshots, and prompts 😅
Love the visual-first approach. Congrats on the launch.
The local-first no-cloud call is the interesting bet! Is no-sync a privacy stance you're committed to or a v1 scope line you'll cross later with end-to-end encrypted sync? Cheers
How does it compare to the now native macOS Tahoe clipboard history? Nicely done!
Many people already rely on Alfred or Raycast clipboard history—what’s the specific 30-second demo workflow where Supaste clearly outperforms those options, and why is that advantage hard for a launcher to replicate?
About Supaste on Product Hunt
“Clipboard Manager for macOS”
Supaste launched on Product Hunt on June 8th, 2026 and earned 288 upvotes and 37 comments, placing #4 on the daily leaderboard. Supaste is a local-first clipboard and screenshot history app for Mac. Save copied text, links, images, files, code, colors, and screenshots in a beautiful searchable timeline.
Supaste was featured in Mac (103.5k followers), Productivity (653.8k followers) and Menu Bar Apps (12.2k followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 150.5k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted Supaste?
Supaste was hunted by Solt Wagner. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
Want to see how Supaste stacked up against nearby launches in real time? Check out the live launch dashboard for upvote speed charts, proximity comparisons, and more analytics.