What a watermark is actually for
Before choosing a style, be clear about the goal. Watermarks serve different purposes and the right design follows from the purpose:
- Attribution: marking your name or brand so that when the image is shared, the source is visible. For this, a subtle corner mark is sufficient.
- Deterrence: making the image less useful to steal while keeping it visible for legitimate viewers. This requires more prominent placement and a mark that cannot be easily cropped out.
- Proof of ownership: establishing that you are the creator for legal or commercial purposes. A watermark alone is weak proof; combine it with timestamped originals, EXIF data, and registration if legal protection is the goal.
Placement: where to put it
The most common placement is a bottom corner — typically bottom-right or bottom-left. This is the least intrusive position and is standard for attribution marks. It reads as professional and expected.
For deterrence, corner placement is weak because it is easily cropped. More effective options:
- Lower-center area: harder to crop without removing a significant portion of the image, still less intrusive than a centered mark.
- Over the most visually interesting area: if the subject of the photo is a product, face, or specific scene element, placing the mark over it makes the photo unusable without the mark. This is aggressive and appropriate only when deterrence is the primary goal.
- Tiled across the full image: effective deterrence, but makes the photo unappealing to legitimate viewers. Only appropriate for proof-of-concept or sample images where the goal is to show what the full version looks like.
Opacity: the most common mistake
Too low and the watermark is invisible. Too high and it looks cheap. The right range depends on the background beneath the mark. The test: zoom out and view the image at the size it will be displayed. The watermark should be readable but not the first thing the viewer notices.
| Mark and background | Opacity | Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Text on a varied photo | 40-60% | White text with a subtle shadow or stroke |
| Logo, attribution | 30-50% | Transparent PNG in a corner |
| Logo, deterrence | 60-80% | Lower-center or over the subject |
| Solid or light background | 20-40% | Less visual competition, so go lower |
Text versus logo
- Text watermarks: typically your website URL, name, or copyright notice — are simple, readable, and do not require design work. A small, clean font at consistent size and opacity is professional. Avoid decorative or script fonts at small sizes: they become illegible and look amateurish.
- Logo watermarks: a symbol or branded mark — look more professional and are harder to replicate as fake attribution. They require a logo file with a transparent background (PNG or SVG). Size the logo to approximately 8–15% of the image width for a corner attribution mark.
Font and color choices
For text watermarks, simpler is better:
- Font: a clean sans-serif (like the font used in your brand) or a classic serif works well. Avoid display, decorative, or novelty fonts.
- Color: white at medium opacity works on most photographic backgrounds because photographs rarely have large pure-white areas. Black works on light-background images. Avoid colors that match the photo background.
- Size: small enough to be unobtrusive; large enough to be legible at the smallest size the photo will be viewed. A URL that is only readable at 100% zoom provides no attribution value on a 600-pixel-wide blog image.
Batch watermarking
If you regularly watermark many photos — for a portfolio, a product catalog, or an event photography delivery — doing it one at a time is impractical. A batch watermarking tool lets you set the watermark position, opacity, size, and text once, then apply it to all files in a set.
PhotoTools' watermark tool supports batch processing. Drop in multiple images, configure the text or logo overlay with position and opacity controls, and download all watermarked copies at once. Processing happens in your browser — no files are uploaded to a server.
A note on watermark removal
Software tools and AI inpainting services can remove simple watermarks from photos, particularly corner marks on uniform backgrounds. A professional who wants to steal your image and has 10 minutes can often remove a standard corner watermark.
This does not make watermarking pointless — it stops casual theft and ensures attribution when the image is shared legitimately. But it means a watermark is a deterrent, not a lock. For high-value images, additional protections like digital fingerprinting, low-resolution preview delivery, or legal registration are more reliable.