Stamp your name on any file in seconds.
You're shipping a photo, a PDF, or a video out the door — and you want it marked. Drop it in, place your logo or text, set the opacity, hit download. Your name travels with the work.
Your watermark, only your watermark · Runs in your browser
Pick the watermarking tool you need
Images, PDFs, and videos — the three places this problem actually lives. Same editor controls across all three, so the gesture you learn on one carries straight over to the next.
Your photos get reused without credit. Watermark them once before posting and the attribution travels with the file.
Add a watermarkYour PDF needs a draft mark, a confidentiality stamp, or your logo on every page. Apply it once, in seconds.
Add a watermarkYour videos get screen-recorded and re-shared. Stamp your logo or handle on every frame so the brand travels with the file, even when the platform strips the metadata.
Add a watermarkWhy putting your name on your work is harder than it should be
A watermark is one image, one position, one opacity. Here's why every tool you've tried turns it into a project.
Watermarking trapped behind paywalls and installers
Photoshop-class editors want twenty minutes of setup for what should be a thirty-second action. Mobile apps want an account, an upgrade, and a credit card before they'll let you keep the result.
And the cruellest twist: half the free online tools quietly add their *own* watermark on top of yours on the way out — turning your file into an ad for them.
Every file type drags you into a different ecosystem
Images live in a dozen design apps. PDFs need a "stamp" feature buried inside whichever PDF editor you bought (or didn't). Videos need a non-linear editor with rendering times that turn a 30-second job into a coffee break.
Three file types, three completely different muscle memories — the moment a different format lands on your desk you start the search again.
Your work walks off because nothing on the page said it was yours
It's the embarrassment of seeing your photo on someone else's feed without a credit. The dread of sending a draft that gets forwarded as the final because there was no clear "draft" mark.
You meant to watermark it. You didn't, because the tool was too heavy. And now the conversation about authorship is happening without you in it.
Putting your name on your work is the most basic claim
It shouldn't take an editing suite, a subscription, or an upload to a stranger's server. The economy that profits from your unwatermarked work shouldn't make it expensive to protect it.
A watermark is one image, one position, one opacity. The friction is the bug, not the feature.
“We know what it's like to find your photo on someone else's feed with no credit, or to send a draft that came back as the final, or to release a training video and watch the brand fall off it the second it gets re-shared. You shouldn't need a design degree to put your name on what you made.”
Built for the three places watermarking actually lives
Three steps. That's it.
No install, no account, no design suite to learn.
Open your file
Drop your image, PDF, or video into the watermarking tool that fits.
Compose the watermark
Logo or text, position on the 9-anchor grid, opacity, rotation. Same controls across all three tools.
Download the marked file
Your name is now part of the file, not just a wish. No watermark from us — only the one you chose.
Without a real watermarking tool…
Unmarked files don't just feel risky — they cost real attribution every time they travel.
- Your photo gets reposted on a competitor's feed with no credit, and the conversation about "is this really yours?" plays out without you in the room.
- A draft contract gets forwarded to a third party who treats it as final, because nothing on the page said otherwise.
- A tutorial video goes viral inside a partner org without the brand attached, because watermarking videos felt like more trouble than the post was worth.
- A wedding rough cut ends up shared as if it were the delivered film, and the couple doesn't realise they're showing the unfinished version.
- Every alternative tool either wants a subscription, slaps its own watermark on top, or caps the file at a size that won't fit your real work.
From unsigned to stamped — in seconds
Before
- The file is yours, but nothing on the page says so. You either send it bare and hope, or you spend twenty minutes in a desktop editor for a thirty-second job.
- When it surfaces somewhere later, it's anonymous — and the conversation about authorship happens without you.
- Next time, with a different file type, you start the whole search over again.
After
- One drop into the page, a logo or a line of text, a click on the right corner of the frame, a slider for opacity. Done.
- The file goes out marked. When it surfaces somewhere later, your name is right there on it — no debate, no archaeology, no apology.
- Same gesture next time, on whatever file type lands next.
Everything you'd expect — and nothing you wouldn't
No installation
Runs in your browser. Nothing to download, nothing to update.
No account
Use any watermarking tool without signing up or handing over an email.
Your watermark, only your watermark
We never add our own logo to your output. The only mark on the result is the one you chose.
Same editor across all three
Image, PDF, video — same 9-anchor grid, opacity, rotation, tile. Learn it once, reach for any of them.
Files stay private
Image and PDF watermarking run on a pure canvas in your browser. Video watermarking runs FFmpeg compiled to WebAssembly — also locally.
Free to use
Stamp as many files as you need. No paywall, no daily limit, no hidden friction.



