ARTS PDF Stratify is the only Adobe® Acrobat® plug-in for creating, inserting, editing and controlling PDF layers.
ARTS PDF Stratify enables technical professionals to prepare easy-to-use layered drawings and diagrams, and enables creative professionals to quickly proof and preview different versions of a design from the one layered page.
ARTS PDF Stratify gives you the tools to select any text or graphics on a page, and then turn them into their own PDF layer. If you have existing sets of designs and drawings, with each layer stored as an individual page, Stratify can quickly convert them into one, layered page.
Only with ARTS PDF Stratify
Create and edit layers directly in Acrobat®. Select any text or graphics on a page and make them a layer. Edit new and existing layers.

Create layered PDFs from any application. Extend your layer creation options (from InDesign CS, Illustrator CS, Visio and AutoCAD) and create layers in PDF documents created from any application, including Microsoft Word, QuarkXPress, Corel Designer, FreeHand and any other application that lets you create PDFs.
Proof different document versions. ARTS PDF Stratify makes dealing with multi-version designs simple. Use Stratify's powerful tools to group related graphics, text, barcodes, pricing and other information into individual layers, and then turn layers on and off to proof, preview, review and print them.
Construct layered PDFs from individual pages. It's not just about creating layers inside of Acrobat®, ARTS PDF Stratify gives you the power to collect together your designs and drawings, and to quickly combine them into a one-page layered document -- all in the one step. This is ideal for turning sets of plans, diagrams, etc. that were originally created as a series of PDF pages into the one layered PDF.
Control layer display. Ideal for PDF documents with many detailed layers, such as maps and CAD drawings, ARTS PDF Stratify gives you the ability to limit and control at which zoom levels a layer is displayed. Set the range at which a layer should be displayed (e.g. 50% to 150%) and the layer will disappear when the user zooms further in or out of that range.

Acrobat is a registered trademark of Adobe Systems, Inc. |