Yes – watermarks in Acrobat. And they’re terrific and the options are many. To access Acrobat’s watermark features, click Document>Watermark. The 3 options presented are Add, Update and Remove – pretty straight-forward to my thinking. In my example, I selected Add to begin the process. Rather than use a pre-made graphic as a watermark (perhaps a company logo), I chose to type the word DRAFT in the Source text box. Immediately, a live preview becomes visible on the right. I changed the watermarks color to red, font to Arial Black Bold, rotated the watermark 45 degrees and dialed it’s opacity down to 25%. I also set its scale to 75% of each target page, allowing it to be appropriately sized on any size page.
This isn’t too complicated, but if I had to repeat the process over & over again, it would become tedious. At the top of the Add Watermark dialog box is the ability to Save Settings, which would allow you to name & save your settings for later use. Handy, but there’s no need to open individual documents – one at a time, in order to watermark them. Below the preview window in the Add Watermark dialog box is an Apply to Multiple button, allowing one to batch apply watermark to many files at once. You are presented with a typical Adobe Add Files button. Select the files you wish to process and click OK. The Output Options allows you to specify a Target Folder, and even offers to add a prefix or suffix to your newly processed PDF files. I entered _draft as a suffix. Click OK, and the job is automated for you.
Learn what PDF technology is all about… and how to use Acrobat 9 to create, edit & enhance your PDF files. I offer training classes in Adobe Acrobat 9, either in your facility or online. To learn more about my Acrobat classes, send me an email to request training information and options.
Alternately, you can also use this online tool..It has lot of features..
http://watermark-images.com/pdf-watermark.aspx