Tuesday, April 12, 2011

How to add a watermark using GIMP

Monkey

GIMP provides a relatively easy way of adding a watermark to images. The following steps provides the entire process of adding a watermark with GIMP. The steps provided herein below have been performed with GIMP 2.6. If you are using another version of GIMP, then also the steps will almost be the same with minor variations.

  1. Open the image in GIMP
  2. Open the Layers window by clicking the Layers button on the image toolbar (alternatively press CTRL-L)
  3. Right Click on the Background layer and select a New Layer and select OK.
  4. Click on New Layer in the Layers window to select the New Layer
  5. Click on the Text Tool icon (Full Black A) to bring the text option on the Toolbox. Alternatively press the key ‘t’.
  6. Select the font and size and click on the photo to insert the text.
  7. Enter the text you wish to use as a watermark in the GIMP text editor
  8. A black and yellow box with the text will appear.
  9. Move the box to the desired location.
  10. Click on Filters in the image toolbar (alternatively ‘Alt r’)
  11. Then click Distort (alternatively ‘d’)
  12. Then click Emboss (alternatively ‘e’)
  13. An Emboss screen with the preview of the text will be shown. You may just keep the settings and select OK, which will reduce the colour intensity of the text.
  14. Select the text layer under the Layers box and reduce the opacity by dragging it to the left. Select your optimum watermark opacity.
  15. Right click the Background layer and select flatten image.
  16. Save and you are done! (Check out the monkey image for the watermark added by me)

GIMP is the GNU Image Manipulation Program. It is a freely distributed piece of software for such tasks as photo retouching, image composition and image authoring. You can download your copy of GIMP for free here.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

It is a very neat and crisp post. I followed the steps exactly and was easily able to add a watermark to my image using Gimp. Gimp rocks. Thanks for sharing.

tony said...

the monkey is cool. i like the tutorial. it is very elaborate, thought it to be too elaborate for slightly techie people like me. but its good and gimp rocks

Edwin said...

Worked great, although I had to look things up because of the translated version I use.

also, I need to see if I can use this to make a watermark image to batch add the watermark instead of doing this one at a time.

Edwin said...

And after some time working with this, I finally had success with this. To make this as standalone watermark, I skipped the 'flatten image', removed the original image I used to work with, and saved the watermark layer as PNG file.

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