![]() Once you have ffmpeg installed, adding a watermark is as easy as passing your existing source through an overlay filter like so:įfmpeg -i test.mp4 -i watermark.png -filter_complex "overlay=10:10" test1.mp4īasically, we’re passing in the original video, and an overlay image as inputs, then passing it through the filter, and saving the output as test1.mp4. ![]() Then you don’t have to worry about including and installing all the right dependencies and codecs you will be using. The easiest way to install ffmpeg is to () a pre-built binary for your specific platform. () provide a powerful way to programmatically enhance or alter videos, and it’s fairly simple to add a watermark to a video using the overlay filter. ![]() See here: ffmpeg-watermark.md # How to Add a Watermark to Video Apparently you can do this easily by calling “ffmpeg” direct from the command-line. Hello Strawberries How to do:Put the video that you wantAdd an textAdd any color and fontLower the opacity to whatever number:TimeStamps:0:160:270:300:400:4. ![]()
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