![]() The updated version is available now from the company’s website, and the Mac App Store. My recommendation, is that if you’re resizing, set that up before you set up your watermark. It’s not a huge deal, but it is an annoyance. The watermark elements will all have to be subsequently resized, and because you can’t edit them in a group, you’ll have to resize them individually. This can be a bit of a pain if you set up a nice series of separate watermark elements, and then change your output size. This means that they stay fixed when you change the size of the image. The size of the watermarks, is based on a fixed pixel amount, rather than a percentage. ![]() You can also set up presets of all the options. Other features of the application include the ability to rename batches, including adding sequence numbers, the ability to optimise the compression and also the ability to change format of image files. These are: GPS, Camera Information, and Copyright and Contact information. Metadata options are broken into three sections, each of which you can either keep or strip out. Text can be any plain text string, or there is also an option to add a date stamp, which will take the date from the images metadata.Īnother new feature is the ability to strip metadata form an image, which is really useful. Previously, you could only have either a single text or graphic watermark, but you can now add multiple text and graphic elements. You can now set up watermarks containing multiple elements. Which brings us to the other big new feature… It’s a much nicer and more visual interface, and it makes it easier to see what you’re doing when setting up a watermark. ![]() As you add options they appear in panels beside the main preview pane. The old version was more like a utility, but the new one is a full sized application, with a nice dark interface. The most obvious change is the new interface. A new version has just been released which adds some new features and a new interface. It’s useful if you’re blogging photographs that you’ve created in applications such as Apple Photos that doesn’t create watermarks. It’s a little application that allows you to quickly batch process images in order to resize and add watermarks. A while ago I wrote about a handy little utility that I use now and again for blogging called Photobulk.
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