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Ok earlier this week, I had a discussion panel with a few buddies of mine on Google Plus
about whether or not you should watermark and the general consensus was that it's not
a good idea, or it's not going really going you from image theft but it might be a good
idea if you want to brand your images with your logo or your studio name or just your
own personal name, just so people know that they're your images and you get credit for
them. So what I am going to do is, I am going to
do a demonstration for you in Photoshop, and then I am also going to do in Lightroom once
you have a nice logo made that you can use in Lightroom as well and you can batch processing
this way and make it much simpler. So when you're exporting a bunch at a time, you can
put your logo on everything.
Ok so I am going to open an image to demonstrate, and that I am going to use is a portrait and
the reason that I am going to use this portrait is that when you're dealing with a picture
of a person, I find that the watermarks can be too obtrusive if you put them over the
face. Ok so we want to make something that is there*, but doesn't obstructs the viewing
of the face, especially if you are showing this to clients, or friends that you have
done pictures for, and they are trying to pick which one they want printed based on
your images or your proofs and you've got a big watermark across it. So you want to
make something that doesn't obscure their face and it's kind of rude to put big letters
across people's face, I think! Ok so I am going to show you a couple of different ways
to do this.
The very simplest way, if you're just doing one image at a time is to add a text layer.
Ok so I've just clicked on the "T" over here in my little panel of tools. The other way
to get to your text tool is by pressing "T" on your keyboard. Text Tool, makes sense!
Ok, so I will give you the keyboard shortcuts as I am hitting them, the ones that I use
most often. Ok, I am on a Mac, obviously I've got a little apple on the top here, and most
of the time if I am using my keyboard shortcut, it's very simpler if I say* command, it's
going to be controlled on a PC.
Ok so first thing I am going to do is select the tool and choose the kind of font that
I want, I have already chosen what font I want, what color, what size I know, what it's
going to be when I type. Ok you might have to play around a bit to find the one that
you like. Click anywhere on the image, and it becomes an active cursor that you can then
type into. Ok so I have my image active and I create a copyright symbol. If you're not
sure how to create that, there's a keyboard shortcut for that as well on a Mac, it is
Alt (or Option) and the "G" key (G for Gordon), on a PC, I will give you the shortcut because
it's certainly different. It is Alt + 0169. So hold the Alt key down and type 0169 on
your number keypad and let go, and you will get the copyright symbol. So I am just going
to go ahead and add my name. I do have a studio name and a business name, but for this purpose
I am going to use my own personal name. Ok, now notice that the cursor is still active
on the text tool or the text layer, to deactivate it and make it into a regular layer, you can
do a couple of different things. You can either just click over just on the layered shelf,
or you can hit command Return on a Mac and like that, Ctrl + Return is going to do the
same thing, and it just deactivates that layer. Basically it says, Yeah, I am done editing
that! Ok so now that you have your text, if it's not quite in the right place, mine's
a little bit off centered, you can move it around, you can add some fancy shmancy stuff.
Ok so the first thing I am doing is to zoom in on this a little bit, so you can see it
a little bigger. Hit "V" for Viktor on your keypad or this little key up on the top-left
of your toolbar that is your Move tool. So "V" for mo"V"e, I guess, (chuckles) ok? And
then it gives you this little crosshair thing, so that you could grab your layer and move
around ok? Ok, so I am going to put it right there.
If you are really finicky, you can add rulers and make it precise, but I am not that precise
here, so I just going to eyeball and say, yep, that's close enough! So I've predetermined
that I wanted this size of text in this font to fill the bottom of the image. If it comes
out too bigger or too small, you don't have to highlight the whole text again, you can
actually edit it just by having the layer selected. Ok so you can see up here, the layer
with the text is highlighted, so it's orange, i.e. it's chosen. If I choose my size here,
this is your font size and this is in your character panel. If you put your cursor over
here, do you see how it changes to a little... it's called a scrubby slider, if I slide this
up and down and let go, it will actually change the size of the font. So maybe I want to make
it a little bit smaller, I don't want it quite so... so obvious. Let's go... let's go about
there, right? So let's go there. So it's about a third of the image and I can choose to put
it either on the bottom-right or the bottom left, whichever I decide. I've chosen white
as my color, you could choose black if you're on an image that has more light tones in it,
and you can also add what's called a layer "Style". All I've done is double clicked on
the layer, and it opens up this little panel for a layer style. So you could quickly add
a drop shadow, um... I am actually just going to apply this. I am going to pull this in
the middle, so that you can see what's happening. Coming back to it, so to reopen your effects,
just double click where it says "effects". Ok so I am dropping a drop-shadow, and you
can actually move your drop shadow by dragging it right on here... like that. So you can
spread it out, you can make it a little wider, you can make it softer or darker, you know,
play around with your drop-shadow till you're happy with it. Ok and you can add various
other different effects, I like Bevel and Emboss. It gives me something that kinds of
makes the text look a little bit 3D, so it's not sort of so one-dimensional. Ok so all
your shadow is doing is adding a little bit of depth to your image. So I'll say yeah,
I'm happy with that. Ok!
The other thing you can do with a text layer, it's that you can change the opacity of it.
I've still got my Move Tool highlighted, you can see my little crosshair is moving there.
If your move tool is highlighted, any number you select on your keypad will affect your
opacity of your layer. Ok, so I am just going to zoom in a little over here. You see the
opacity shows at 100% up there. If I type "5" on my keyboard, it not changes to 50%,
and look what's happened to our image, ok our text has faded out. Ok, I'll go back to
100%... 50%. Ok so just mix it a little bit softer and a little more subtle, right? So
let's put this back in the corner.
So if we're doing text, we could say, tune out* looks pretty good, I am happy with that.
If you want to turn it off and on, you just click the little eyeball next to the layer.
And then say, yeah I'm good with that! Ok, I am done! Then you would say that, oh there's
a new file with your logo on it, ok? If it is something that you think you're going to
be doing often, such as adding a logo, there's something you might to consider - creating
an action form. Ok, I'll show you how to do that in a little bit. I also want to show
you what it looks like if you make an ugly watermark, or I would consider an ugly watermark.
So let's create an ugly one. Ok, so I am going to put a new type layer, and I am going to
start with the font being really big. So here I'm going to.... Yeah big enough font! I know
I want a really big font, so I am going to add that G... Alt + G. I think I want it even
bigger than that, I'll make it bigger than that. Going back to our little characters
panel, I want to make this massive, it's as massive this could get... that should be good.
Ok so that's pretty obviously obscuring her face, it's pretty hard to see her expression,
and how is she supposed to pick her images based on that. Ok, that would be what I would
consider an ugly watermark, even if the opacity was turned down, I still consider that an
ugly watermark. Well the client is looking at that, they have a really hard time choosing
as it is, and then you add this kind of thing over the top and it just complicates the issue
for them. So I would say, avoid this type of thing because your clients aren't really
going to like it, especially if they have paid you to do the job. And it makes it look
to them like you expect them to steal their images, so it kind of feels like you don't
trust them, and maybe that is the case but think about it from their perspective, you
know, how you would feel if blatantly somebody said, I don't trust you with my image, so
I am going to put this over across your face, so you don't do anything with it! It doesn't
feel so good right? So I am going to stick with more of the subtle one down at the bottom
for myself.
Alright, I promised to show you how to do on action. So I am going to get rid of this
big giant "C" over her face and I am actually going to get rid of this one as well, and
I am going to show you how to record it as an action. So we are back to just a regular
image. Ok so the actions panel is this little play button on your thing here, if you're
not sure how to get to any of these, you'll find them in here as well, Actions on the
Window panel. To... what an action does is it records the series of steps as you create
them, and it allows you to play it back quickly with one button, at a click of one button
several steps that you did. It also allows you to apply it as a batch across several
images. That's a little more complex, I am not going to get into that in this tutorial,
but I am going to show you how to create it and you can apply it with one click.
Ok so to create your action from this little side panel here, go to the pull-down menu,
and choose a new action. I am going to call it, and I am going to use my copyright symbol,
and I am just going to add my name, so that... I am going it something that I know what it
is if I am looking at the menu, and I am going to save it in something... a folder that I
made called "My Action", so I know those little ones that I created. Ok, and as soon as I
clicked on that, you noticed that it came up right away and the red button lit up. Ok
so just like on a tape recorder, oh jeez, I am dating myself now (chuckle). I didn't
know it would have a button like that now, I guess audio mix on your computer I suppose.
Ok so that's recording, so anything that you do after this point is recording until you
push the stop button.
Ok so the first thing you want to do before you add any text is make sure that you've
got your text set up how you want it. Aha, see now mine is not because we played around
with that giant text. I know that I want 48, I don't want 600 or whatever it was. So I've
got the right font, I've got the right color, and I know I've got all the right stuff, so
hit your "T" key, that's your text. Do the same process again, Alt + G, type in your
text, command Enter. "V" to get the move tool, move it down to the bottom and this will apply
on the recorded version, so on your action the move will apply. Right, create your layer
style, ok and I'm going to add my drop-shadow, I'm going to add Bevel and Emboss... ok I'm
happy with that, and I'm going to change my opacity, so I am going to fade it out just
a little bit.
So if you're happy with that, go back to your actions panel. You'll see that it's recorded,
make a text layer, move current layer, set layer style, and set current layer. So click
the Stop button, so record is there. Stop is right next to it and now it's done recording
your action. Now if you want to test that your action has actually worked, let's just
hit the little eyeball on there and turn this layer off. Ok so here is your action, you
don't have to open it up, and all you have to do is click the play button down below
here. Ok, so the buttons are stop, record and play. So we hit play and voila, there
is our lovely text layer! How amazing is that, right?
Ok so that is the first way to make a nice looking text logo or a text watermark. The
next one I am going to show you is ... let's get rid of these extra layers that we don't
need.
So the next way I am going to show you is actually doing it with a logo. So I myself
have a logo made for my studio, so I am going to open up this logo... here we go. Ok so
that's my logo. Ok, so I am put it in my image... you know the rest of my images aren't white,
so the easiest way to select white, is to go and tune your color range and choose highlights.
So what will happen is if I show this on here, it is going to show me the part that it selected...
it will show me that I am missing a tiny little bit, but honestly, for the way we're going
to do this, it's not going to make a difference, ok. So I am going to show black. So that going
to... it is going to be selecting my white.
So now the logo itself is not selected, the whites are... so what we want to do then is
invert it, ok so I go, Select -> Inverse, now my logo is selected, and what I am going
to do is a copy-paste. And when I do that, it's going to paste just the logo on a new
layer that's all by itself. Ok, so on a Mac it's Command + C, and then Command + V (for
Viktor) and I can see I have a new layer. If I turn off the bottom one, you see I have
just the logo where you see these little squares, these funny looking grid-thing, ok I am going
to move that around, it's alright... where you see these squares is transparent. Ok,
so that's not what your background looks like, it's just telling you that it is transparent.
Ok so we could just dump that other layer and it's gone, right? What we're going to
do is funk this one up a little bit, ok so to make a really cool looking logo, I am going
to add my drop-shadow and Bevel and Emboss again, ok, which kind of gives it a little
bit of texture. I personally like Emboss or Pillow Emboss, one of those two, and I'll
probably play around with it a little bit to get it just how I want it, play around
with the shadow a little bit, the blending options up here, if you go into Advanced blending,
you'll see this thing called, "fill opacity" where I'm circling my cursor, watch what happens
if I change this from 100 to 0. My logo disappears, but the shadow is still there. Cool right?
Ok so what I am going to do is I am actually just going to leave the shadows and I'm not
going to have the logo showing, so that... well how is that going to appear on an image
is it's going to be really cool because it will be showing the image through your logo.
Ok so I can move the shadow around with these little sliders, or I can also just grab it
and move it around this way. You know what, I am actually going to put it on this side,
and my Bevel and Emboss, I want to make sure my white is all the way cranked up, like that...
black too. Ok so what that's giving me is really cool looking logo, I'll make sure it
looks ok over there. Well a really cool looking logo that is transparent, and it just looks
like it's raised off the surface. So it's very very subtle.
So what I am going to do now is I am going to do a Save As, "Save As" which is Command
+ Shift + S, and I am going to save it with a name, I am going to call it "Her View",
which is my business watermark transparent, and I am going to add dark, because this is
a darker version. I am going to make a light version that has a light shadow as well. Ok
and you want to save it as a PNG file, a JPEG doesn't allow full transparency, so if you
save it as a JPEG, even though your background is transparent, it will actually come out
as white. So save it as a PNG... and I am going to change it slightly, we're going to
make the drop-shadow white... change* it to lighten and...oh we can't really see what
we're doing, so we can actually make a background layer, and just paint it in with black, just
paint that in... here we go, paint bucket that in. ok so now we can see what we can
see what we are doing on this layer, and that looks like it's got a pretty well nicely glow.
Ok so we are going to do a Save As again, and this time... called it transparent dark,
and this time it's going to be transparent light. Ok, make sure we get the right format,
PNG, right and then we are going to close this. Now with the logo, I prefer to do Place,
as opposed to Open and then drag it over. Ok, place will put your logo in the center
and make it a smart object. So anything that you add with the place function, makes it...
automatically added as a smart object, so I could downsize it. Ok so you see the problem
with that, right? I've got this big white square on the top of my picture, and I've
actually seen people do watermarks like that, so they will put their logo in the corner,
of course it maybe not that big, they will put it in the corner with this big splotch.
So you're losing a good chunk of your picture that way. Look at how much nicer it is to
place, again find our nice transparent watermark, so I am going to use the light one because
it's got white shadows and it's on a darker shirt, so we'll use the place, and then it
automatically size it... place it down here. So look at how much more subtle that is than
the big chunky one, reducing it a size or two, and putting it nicely in the corner.
So I'll put it down... down there. Right, let's have a look at how our other one, so
let me place the dark one... ah it's not going to be too bad either because I did the Bevel
and Emboss. The Bevel and Emboss adds the little white line on the other side. If I
didn't add that, it would just be glossed. You would have a shadow on one side and nothing
on the other side, so it kind of gives it an outline on the opposite side, ok and there
we have it. So I kind of like the black one myself, so I am going to keep the black one
and put it over here. Now you can also... once you've got it in there, you can even
fade that out too. Alright, this one I think I've done pretty subtle, so I am going to
leave it at full opacity. Alright, now look at the difference.
So that is the basic idea of how you add your watermarks in Photoshop. Now you can also
create a same kind of action for adding your logo, once you've created this nice transparent
PNG file, you can create another action to add it as a logo, just like we did with the
text. So create action, record your steps, and save it. And then you can do use the batch
processing to apply it to many files at once.
Alright so I'll be right back and we're going to show you how to do this in Lightroom, if
you have Lightroom and you're using Lightroom for most of your processing. You don't have
to come over to Photoshop to do this. Once you create your nice little transparent logo,
I'll show you how to add it in Lightroom, real easy and you could create a saved pre-set
for it, right? So we'll be right back in Lightroom.
Welcome back! As you could see we are now in Lightroom. Well I use Lightroom version
4, and I'm pretty sure that if you go back a version that this will work with older versions
as well, watermarking was part of Lightroom for a while. So this should work if you have
Lightroom. If you do have an older version by the way such as 3, I highly recommend upgrading
to 4 anyways! There was a lot of stuff that happened between 3 and 4 that is a huge benefit
such as your clarity slider works much nicer and the highlight shadow recovery is much
much better, you can pull a lot more stuff out. Better upgrade this*.
So here we are in Lightroom, and I've just picked a few images as a sample here, so we
are not doing a full gallery. And what we're going to do is, I've processed these already
and I am ready to export my raw files as JPEG and i want to put watermarks on them. So in
Lightroom that happens, you can do it a couple of different ways, you can do it in the print
module, and then export your print file as a JPEG. And that's nice if you're doing, like
a finite* print with a border or something like that. However, most of the time I am
just exporting a profile or something for social media or so on, so I just want to put
a watermark in the corner that is my branding. So we are going to take our nice watermark
that we created over in Photoshop, and add them to these lovely images here. So as you'll
see on the screen, there's several images picked out, and some are color-coded red,
and some are color-coded yellow. The reason I've done is I actually create two different
watermarks. I create one that goes in the right-hand corner, and one that goes in the
left-hand corner. So I've actually presorted these, I'll just run through them. So the
ones that are marked with red and I'm hoping I remember which is which, are going to have
the watermark in the bottom-right corner, you'll see there's a nice space there where
our logo will go. Yellow is going to hang* in the left. So this one's going to left,
this is going to be left, this is going to be on the right, right, right, left, left,
left, and right. Ok, now I have predetermined that, so if you have several images to export
and you know that some aren't going to work around one side or the other, just flag them
in some way, in Lightroom you've got color-coding, you've got number-coding, and so on. You can
rank them with a certain star level and that's what I've done here, and then I've searched
for only those ones that are flagged with the red and the yellow. Ok, you can also sort
them out. Right now I am sorting by filename, if I choose to sort them by label color, it
will give me a nice row of red and a nice row of yellow, so I can just pick them easily
and then move to my watermarks in a series. So I am going to pick the top row, so just
a Shift + Click, click the first one, hold Shift and click the last one will select all
of your images in the row, and I am going to export them. And I am going to show you
how to add the watermark in the export dialog box, and how to save it as a preset.
Ok, so once we click at Export, the dialog box will pop up for us to be able to export
our images, hopefully sooner than later, good. Ok as you can see here, I have got several
presets already made, so I am not going to use one of those. I am going to show you how
I make one and what settings I use particularly for social media exports. Ok just let me get
rid of this one, and we're going to make a new one. Ok so it'll ask you various different
things, and I'll go through each one and you'll probably... if you've done a lot of stuff
in Lightroom, you probably have your own presets already made. Ok, so generally if I am using
a preset, I choose this one here, it even tells you that it's useful for presets. Choose
folder later, ok as to where to put my exported files. File naming, I generally do rename
them and I do that for different reasons. So in this case I make them with a filename,
and then add a (dash) -web at the end, there's an extension before the JPEG name. The reason
I do that is that if I am exporting out different versions of the same image or the same file,
they're all going to have the same filename. And it's easy to get them confused if you're
on your computer and just browsing the files, you can't tell which one is the full res,
which one is for our email, so I just name them with those things that I know, I can
easily see at a glance, right? I know this is for outline, I know one that says "-print"
at the end is full size high res print file. Ok, so I am going to leave it as a filename
-web, ok. Launching* video, ok for the web I do JPEGs and sRGB as a color space. The
others are too big and the web doesn't displays that anyways. And I am going to go about,
um 70% ok, so that's compressing your JPEG to a 70% JPEG. You can limit your file size
if you want as well, I generally don't! Image sizing, again if I'm on the web, I will size
it to a maximum size. Now depending on where I'm putting it, I tend to put a little bit
larger images on Google Plus than I do on Facebook. But for most things, I use an image
that is 1100 wide, and whatever height the image is, so it will change based on if it's
a vertical or horizontal, and 72dpi. The web doesn't displays anything under than 72dpi
anyways.
If I am going to the web, I can sharp it for screen. These things are not as important
to this particular tutorial, but you can take a look through what those do. Metadata will
be what types of information you want to attach to the JPEG. So I usually leave everything,
including my camera data, especially if I am posting on a photography sharing site.
People like to know, you know, what aperture* a shot takes at, that kind of thing.
Ok this is the one we are going to be most interested in today. Ok so if you're going
to add the watermark, you need to make sure that this checkbox is ticked off. Ok and not
added* to but with the checkmark. So in here, you'll see at the pull-down menu that I already
have several to choose from. The first time you do this, you won't see that because these
are all the ones that I have saved. Ok so I am going to go down to "edit watermark",
so follow along with me, great and this dialog box will popup. Nice and quick, which is nice,
and when it comes up the first time, it's generally going to be on this setting, Text.
Ok so watermark style is showing text and you can see that previously I had used one
with my name, just like I did in Photoshop, right? You can add it in the corner, you can
fade it out, you can put it in the middle if I want it to make it, and you know, our
nice ugly watermark again. Ok so we've done... we did ugly Photoshop, we could do ugly in
Lightroom as well, but we don't want to do that, do we? We want to make it a little nicer.
So we want to go back to being able to use that graphic, that logo that we just did in
Photoshop. Ok so to do that, we want to switch to graphic style watermark and down below,
choose the file. Ok so in here, where we saved our logo, I am going to use that transparent
dark one, because that one came up pretty nice on Photoshop. Ok once you do, it shows
up. There it is, voila! So now you have the same types of choices, you can size it, or
you can stick it smack dab in the middle and then we've got back to our, you know, hideous
overgrown watermark again. But notice how lovely this one is though, you'll see the
image is coming right through the watermark. It is nicely transparent because we saved
that as a PNG. Ok so all we got showing up is our lovely shadow, and our highlight on
the other side. I personally like this type of look. It gives it a 3D quality, well we're
going to size it down, and we're going to scale it down just a little bit, right? I
like to put mine in the corner and now we're doing... oh, we're doing bottom-left on this
one, right? So put it in the bottom-left and these things here tell you that you can move
it away from the edge, how far you want to move it away from the edge. So three increments,
whatever their increment measurement is in Lightroom. That's my choice, I like it away
from the edge a little bit, and otherwise it's just kind of tight to the edge.
So three away on both sides, nice and evenly spaced, the next part is to save a preset
for this logo! Just like any other preset, save as a new preset down here, we're going
to title it and then we're going to call it bottom-left because our logo is in the bottom
left, and I am going to say 15, because that's the size. Oops, I didn't make it 15, let's
make it 15. Ok, so the size here is this number. Ok, so it's 15, or 15%, or 15 pixels, I guess
it'll be percent. So I am going to save it as Her View Logo Transparent bottom-left 15px.
A name that I will recognize just by looking at the pull-down menu so I know what logo
I am using, where it is going, and how big it is, right? Save that as a preset, these
little arrows at the top here, right there, they allow you to scroll through any of the
selected images. So in this case, I think I have selected 5 images, so if I just click
the right arrow, you'll see that they all look fairly decent with our logo. Now notice
this one gets a little bit lost in the leaves. Images like this, you might want to do a custom
one, and you might want to put it somewhere else. Maybe you might even want to put it
up in the top corner. Alright, and so you could do a special one just for this image
if you decide to. Personally, I don't think it's that big a deal, I am not going to worry
about it so much. I am just going to leave it as it is, it's going to be subtle that's
all!
Ok so I am happy with that, we saved our preset and we say done. So now we're now back to
our export dialog box, we've chosen all the setting that we want and our only other thing
to do is to create an export preset, ok. So in here, I am going to save it as web 1100
with logo. Ok, now that's going under my social media exports, alright create! There is my
preset, so next time if you're going to do this with the same settings, you don't even
have to go in and do all of this, the renaming, the sizing, everything, you just click that
and it's boom, right there!
Ok so now we've got our sizing, we've got everything set, and we just have to click
export. Ok so we're going to put them in here, just going to make a new folder called web
images and I'm exporting the image there. Ok now if I do my top row, select top row,
and we do the process again. Now I am going to choose that same preset that I just made,
all I have to do is go to the watermarking settings, then go edit, switch it over to
the right because that's where we want it now, that's the only change we're making.
Resave it as a new logo preset, so I am going to say here, new logo transparent bottom-right
15px, and save it. We can scroll through them, check that they are all good... looks pretty
decent, export them, it's going to ask me, it's already picking that right folder. Ok
so now it is going to export those. Now notice that I didn't wait for the first batch to
be done before I did the second batch. Lightroom is a program that works really well with multiple
tasks going on in the background, if you have enough memory on your computer. That's a whole
other topic of discussion about getting Lightroom to run faster and so on, but you have enough
RAM, and you have enough space on your computer, and Lightroom is running quickly enough, you
could do multiple tasks at once.
So we'll just wait for this to be completed, and then we'll go have a look at them and
make sure that they came out the way we wanted on our files.
Ok so our export is complete, you can see that the dialog box in Lightroom has finished
running, and there's our folder with our images. So if I just, kind of, zoom up a little bit,
you could see on the screen there's a logo, bottom-right, bottom-left, bottom-left, bottom-right,
right, right, left, left, left and right. Sounds like a strange military song. Ok so
there's our logo in the bottom corner, looks pretty good. See how nice that little drop-shadow
does and it works really well on an image that has nice, clean corner of course, which
some of these do and some don't. Some are better than others, but I like a nice clean,
simplistic look of the transparent logo. It gives it an elegant touch, little bit of branding
without being over-the-top, in-your-face.
Ok so that is it for today's tutorial, How to make a nice transparent Watermark. If you
have any questions or comments about this, or the Photoshop portion of the video, please
add your comment in the comment section below. If you're watching this on YouTube, please
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