Sign contracts, quotes, and proposals in your browser. Type a name in a cursive font, draw with your trackpad, or upload a scanned signature. Drop it on the last page (or any page) at any position. Output is a signed PDF — original stays untouched.
01 — What you create
Drop a contract, quote, or proposal. Type a name in a cursive font, draw a signature with your trackpad, or upload a scanned one. Place it on any page at any position — output is a fresh signed PDF.
Service Agreement
Sonchoy Studio Pvt Ltd · Northwind Books Pvt Ltd
Ref SCY-NWB-26-001
Dated 23 May 2026
This agreement sets out the terms between the parties for the provision of brand and design services across the period 23 May 2026 to 22 May 2027. The Service Provider agrees to deliver the scope described in Schedule A, against the fees set out in Schedule B, on the timelines set out in Schedule C.
Either party may terminate with 30 days written notice; obligations accrued before termination remain due. The agreement is governed by the laws of Karnataka, India.
x ____________________________
Service Provider
Signed by Alex Hartwell · 23 May 2026
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02 — How it works
Signing a contract used to mean print → ink → scan → email. This tool collapses the loop to one click: drop the PDF, capture your signature once, place it, save. The original PDF stays untouched; the output is a clean signed copy.
Drag the contract, quote, or proposal in. The tool reads its page count in the browser — nothing uploads.
Type your name in a cursive font, draw with your trackpad, or upload a scanned signature image. Live preview shows the result instantly.
Pick a position (corner / centre / custom %), pick the page (last is default for contracts), optionally add a "Signed by X · date" caption, and save.
03 — Built for contracts
Type your name in a cursive / script / casual / italic-serif font, draw on a canvas with your mouse or finger, or upload a scanned PNG / JPG of your wet signature.
Bottom-right (default), bottom-left, bottom-centre, top corners, centre, plus a custom X / Y % position when the contract has a specific signature box.
Last page only is the default for contracts. Switch to first page, all pages, or a specific page number when the template demands it.
Set the signature width as a percentage of the page (5–100%). Default 25% — big enough to read, small enough to fit a corner. Aspect ratio is preserved automatically.
Auto-print "Signed by <name> · <date>" beneath the signature for audit-friendly output. Falls on the correct side of the signature based on position.
Your signature image, the source PDF, and the signed output never touch the network. Everything renders locally via canvas + jsPDF. Nothing is uploaded or logged.
Bulk OCR, batch invoicing, multi-party e-signing, redaction, audit logs — pdfFiller picks up where Sonchoy ends. Free for 30 days, no credit card.
Run 100+ invoices, statements, or conversions in one go.
Turn paper invoices into searchable, exportable data.
Multi-party signatures with full audit trails.
Mask sensitive ledger lines before sending to auditors.
04 — Common questions
In many jurisdictions, a signed PDF (an image of a signature affixed by the signatory with intent to sign) carries legal weight equivalent to a wet signature — under e-IDAS in the EU, the ESIGN Act in the US, the IT Act in India. But "intent" is the key word: a court will look at whether you genuinely signed. For high-stakes contracts (employment, M&A, real-estate), use a dedicated e-signature service with audit trail and identity verification, not a static image overlay.
Yes — once the signed PDF is saved, the signature image is permanently embedded at the chosen page coordinates. Every PDF viewer will render it identically (the same pixels, in the same place). Where rendering differs is the typed-mode font choice: if you typed "Alex Hartwell" in Snell Roundhand, your output uses a real Snell-rendered PNG, not the system font reference — so it looks the same on Windows where Snell isn't installed.
In one pass, no — the tool applies a single signature per run. To sign in multiple positions or with multiple signatories, run the tool once per signature: first signatory signs the unsigned PDF, second signatory uses the output of step 1 as their input, and so on. Each pass adds one more signature; the previous ones stay embedded.
Typing renders your name in a cursive font and creates a transparent PNG on the fly — fast, no scanner needed, but the result looks like a font (because it is). Uploading a scanned PNG of your wet signature looks far more like a real signature, but requires a scanner / phone-capture step beforehand. Drawing falls in the middle — natural-looking strokes if you have a stylus or trackpad, less so with a mouse.
The signature itself is an image (PNG), so it won't be selectable as text. The rest of the PDF content also rasterises during the sign process (same approach as the other PDF utilities), so text-layer content becomes part of each page image. For text-selectable output with embedded signatures, use a dedicated PDF editor.
Never. The PDF, signature image, and signed output stay on your machine. All canvas drawing, image generation, and PDF rendering happens locally in your browser tab. No upload, no third-party API, no logging. Close the tab and the signature is gone from memory.
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