Add a Getty Images-Style Watermark to Your Photos

Apply the same tiled diagonal watermark Getty Images, Shutterstock, and Adobe Stock use on their preview photos. Preset to the classic stock-photo style — just upload your image, type your text, and download. Free, no signup, and everything runs in your browser.

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PNG JPG WEBP
Getty-Style Watermark Settings
48px
40%
20px
150px
-30°

Preview

How to Add a Getty Images-Style Watermark

Replicate the Getty Images watermark on your own photos in three steps — nothing to install.

1

Upload Your Photo

Drop a PNG, JPG, or WEBP photo into the upload area or click "Choose Image". The photo opens in your browser and stays there — ConvertKr never uploads, stores, or sees your files. This privacy guarantee makes the tool safe for client work, unreleased shoots, and personal photos.

2

Customize the Getty-Style Preset

The tool is preset to the exact Getty Images watermark configuration: tiling enabled, −30° rotation, 40% opacity, 150px tile spacing, white text. Type your own text (your name, brand, or copyright notice) and the diagonal tiled pattern instantly updates across the entire photo. Want a logo instead? Switch to Image mode and upload a PNG.

3

Download the Watermarked Photo

The live preview shows exactly how the final watermarked photo will look. When you are happy with the result, click "Apply & Download" and the watermarked file saves to your device in the original format. There is no ConvertKr branding, no "trial" label, and no resolution downgrade.

Why Use the Getty Images-Style Watermark Tool

The most accurate free way to apply the stock-photo watermark style to your own photos.

Preset to the Getty Style

No guessing at angles or opacity. The tool opens with tiling on, −30° rotation, 40% opacity, 150px spacing, and white text — the exact visual signature of the Getty Images preview watermark. Type your text and download. Power users can still adjust every parameter.

Tiled Across the Whole Photo

Corner watermarks get cropped out. The Getty-style tiled diagonal pattern repeats your text or logo across the entire image, which makes it virtually impossible to remove without destroying the photo. This is the same anti-theft approach Getty, Shutterstock, and Adobe Stock rely on.

Text or Logo

Use any text — your name, business, website URL, or a copyright notice — or switch to image mode and upload your own logo. The scale slider lets you make a logo subtle (10%) or assertive (200%). Both modes tile in the same diagonal pattern.

Live Preview

Every change — text, font, color, opacity, spacing, rotation — updates the preview canvas in real time. You see exactly what the downloaded photo will look like before saving. No "render" button, no waiting.

100% Private — No Upload

Watermarking happens entirely inside your browser via the HTML5 Canvas API. Your photos are never uploaded to ConvertKr or any third party. When you close the tab, every trace of your work is gone. Perfect for sensitive, unreleased, or client-confidential photos.

Free Forever — No Signup

No account, no email, no credit card, no daily watermark cap, and no "premium" feature lockout. ConvertKr does not stamp its own brand onto your output. Use it as often as you need.

The Getty Images Watermark Style, Explained

What makes the Getty watermark distinctive — and how to replicate it.

What Does the Getty Images Watermark Look Like

If you have ever browsed Getty Images preview photos, you have seen the watermark: pale white text repeating diagonally across the entire image at roughly −30 to −45 degrees, semi-transparent so the underlying photo remains visible but compromised. The text usually reads "Getty Images" or a contributor identifier. The pattern is intentionally dense — spacing is tight enough that no usable rectangle can be cropped out, yet loose enough that the photo's composition is still readable for evaluation. Shutterstock and Adobe Stock use almost identical schemes.

Why the Tiled Diagonal Pattern Works

A single corner watermark, no matter how prominent, can be cropped off with a single drag of the crop tool. A tiled diagonal watermark covers every region of the image, so removing it would require either reconstructing the underlying pixels (which only works for trivial backgrounds) or paying for a license. That is why stock agencies use this exact pattern — it is the cheapest deterrent that genuinely works at scale. The diagonal angle is preferred over a vertical or horizontal grid because it crosses key compositional lines (horizon, subject silhouette) and is harder to clean up with content-aware fill.

The Exact Settings ConvertKr Uses by Default

The Getty-style preset here is: text watermark, white color (#ffffff), 48px font size in Arial, 40% opacity, tiling enabled with 150 pixel spacing, −30 degree rotation. These values closely approximate what Getty Images uses on its preview thumbnails. If you are protecting larger photos (3000+ pixels wide), increase the font size to around 64-80px and the tile spacing to 200-250 pixels so the tiling does not look too dense. For tiny social-media-sized photos, drop the font to 24-32px and the spacing to 80-100 pixels.

When to Use This vs. a Single Corner Watermark

Use a Getty-style tiled watermark when theft protection is the priority — portfolio previews shared with clients before payment, watermarked samples for marketplace listings, photos posted to high-traffic social platforms, and stock-style preview catalogs. Use a single corner watermark when you want subtle branding without obscuring the photo — a finished portfolio piece, a blog hero image, or marketing collateral where the photo itself is the message. Many photographers maintain two output versions of each shoot: a corner-watermarked finished version and a tiled-watermarked preview.

Customizing the Preset

Although the page opens with the Getty preset, every setting is fully editable. Drop opacity to 20% for a near-invisible mark suited to portfolio previews. Push it to 70% for proof images sent before payment. Switch the color from white to a tinted gray (#cccccc) for photos with mostly bright backgrounds. Use a serif font like Georgia for a more editorial look, or Impact for an assertive deterrent. The rotation can be set anywhere from −180 to 180 degrees — horizontal (0°) gives a less common straight-tile look, while −45° matches Shutterstock more closely than Getty.

Frequently Asked Questions

About adding a Getty Images-style watermark.

How do I add a Getty Images-style watermark to my photos?

Upload a photo, type your text (your name, brand, or copyright notice) and download. The tool is already preset to the Getty Images watermark configuration: tiling on, −30° rotation, 40% opacity, 150px spacing, white text. No need to adjust anything unless you want to.

Can I add a watermark like Getty Images for free?

Yes — this entire tool is free with no signup, no upload, no watermark cap, and no premium tier. ConvertKr does not brand your output and does not see your photos. Every feature, including the Getty-style preset, is available to anyone.

Is ConvertKr affiliated with Getty Images?

No. ConvertKr is an independent online tools site. This page simply replicates the visual style of the Getty Images preview watermark so users can apply a similar protective pattern to their own photos. "Getty Images" is a trademark of Getty Images, Inc.

Can I use my own logo instead of text?

Yes. Switch to "Image / Logo" mode and upload a PNG, JPG, or WEBP file. The logo will tile across the photo in the same diagonal pattern. PNG files with transparent backgrounds work best for a clean look.

What image formats can I watermark?

The tool accepts PNG, JPG (JPEG), and WEBP photos. The watermarked output is saved in the same format as the input, preserving the original quality.

Will the watermark be removable from the downloaded photo?

The tiled diagonal pattern is specifically designed to be extremely difficult to remove. Cropping is impossible because the watermark covers the entire photo. Clone-stamping or content-aware fill works only on simple backgrounds and leaves obvious artifacts. For maximum protection, keep opacity above 40% and ensure your text contrasts the underlying image.

Are my photos uploaded anywhere?

No. All processing happens locally in your browser using the HTML5 Canvas API. ConvertKr never sees your photos, never stores them, and never has access to them at any point. Closing the tab clears everything.

Does it work on mobile?

Yes. The page is fully responsive and works on phones and tablets in Chrome, Safari, Firefox, and Edge. All sliders and the position grid respond to touch input.

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