I have not done it myself, I just did some search on Google and found things the looked like what your want.
Read this:
https://www.flickr.com/help/forum/en-us/72157634700481093/The link above twas how to a a set of photos from the
Flickr web site and burn them to a CD. Sad to say, they did not get the answer. You will have to extract the photos one-by-one and save them to folder on your computer.
So you have to browse the site to find the answer.
https://www.flickr.com/help/forum/en-us/72157632542932227/https://www.flickr.com/help/forum/en-us/72157634401045138/The next link says it is in Flickr.
http://petapixel.com/2015/05/07/you-can-now-bulk-download-from-flickr-your-photos-really-do-belong-to-you/For a while Flickr had partnered up with a company called Qoop (now out of business) that would bulk load your photos to CDs or DVDs and sell them back to you, but that never sat right with me either — why should you have to pay to get your own photos back? Also for someone like me with over 100,000 photos on the site, how many CDs would that take and how much would that cost
So they made a change...
As I understand it, there still may be photo limits for how many individual photos you can select in camera roll for a single download for performance reasons, but you can select large batches of photos from the new camera roll and Flickr will convert those photos into a zip file for you and send them right back to you on your computer. The number of photos you can download is unlimited. You can download multiple zip files effectively accessing 100% of your photostream.
So, there is some way to get your photos from Flickr if you have an account. But you should not have to pay for your download. Each download might have a limit, but you can just select more pictures and download again.
If it is a ZIP file, you can extract it with Windows.
Does that help?
If all else fails, fill the screen with one photo, do screen save and copy it in Photo Shop or any photo editor that can catch a screen shot. It is a time-consuming job and the quality may be poor, but it always works.
How to Take a Screenshot on Any Device -from PCMag