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Hi everyone,
I'm new to Adobe Acrobat and currently trying to decide which Adobe app or subscription would best suit my needs. The Adobe Creative Cloud All Apps plan seems like the most comprehensive option, but it's also quite expensive—so I want to make sure I choose wisely.
Here’s what I’m looking to do:
Convert a wide variety of file types (especially images and documents) to and from PDF
Handle large files, particularly high-resolution images, without a 100MB file size limit
Perform these tasks from a high-end mobile device, but ideally with access on desktop as well
Download, export, and edit PDFs with ease
I was considering the Adobe Acrobat Premium subscription, but from what I’ve read, it seems to limit PDF conversion and export to files under 100MB—which would be a problem for me.
Can anyone with experience recommend the best Adobe app or subscription that fits these requirements? Preferably one that includes both mobile and desktop access under a single subscription and allows for flexible, high-capacity PDF conversion.
Thanks in advance for your help!
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Thanks for your question!
For the most complete experience with PDF conversion — without file size limitations — we recommend using Adobe Acrobat Pro on desktop (Windows or Mac). Acrobat Pro provides robust tools for converting, editing, organizing, and compressing PDFs, and does not impose size limits like some free or web-based tools. And with Acrobat Pro subscription, you get access to Acrobat Web as well
If you’re using a mobile device, the Adobe Acrobat Reader app with a Premium subscription is the best option. It allows for converting files to and from PDF, but please note that the mobile version has some limitations compared to the desktop version, particularly with large or complex files. For more information on mobile-related subscription: https://adobe.ly/4iNE72i.
Summary:
For desktop: Use Adobe Acrobat Pro (part of the Acrobat subscription) : https://adobe.ly/42GJz2n
For mobile: Use Adobe Acrobat Reader Premium (separate mobile-only subscription).
Let us know which device or workflow you’re focused on, and we can guide you further!
~Tariq
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Tariq is right, but I'd like to dig into the weeds for a moment and talk about resolution and storage size. AND what your needs really are.
You supply a lot of information, but what you do not say is what are the dimensions of the documents you are printing. What the number of pages will be in the documents you are printing, and what is the final resolution you want for the documents you are printing? What is the format you're going to be saving your images in? ALL of these play into the final storage size, so this is critical.
Let me start with some basics: with ANY image, if you decrease the size of an image by half, you will decrease the storage size by 3/4. Think of it this way: if your image is 10" square and decrease it by half, the image is now 5" square and that is 25% of the original image. The same goes the other way, obtaining images that are now 150% bigger if you double the number of pixels.
If you are printing from the average inkjet printer, the maximum necessary dots per inch is around 140–180 dpi. For a LaserWriter, it's around 300 dpi. For a high-end artistic magazine, it's around 600 dpi. So, if you're making a high-end artistic magazine that will be printed out on a home-style inkjet printer. The storage size will be over 300% larger than necessary. On the other hand, if you're assuming that only homeowners will be printing a high-end artistic magazine, and a high-end artistic studio tries to print this out, it will look pretty pathetic and very pixelated.
Again, these are just some of the issues.
So, it will help us out if you explain to us what you have, what your objective is, who will be looking/printing this, etc. We can make stabs in the dark, but we can't really help you unless we know what you are doing and what you are expecting.
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Thank you for the informative response—I really appreciate it.
That said, I’m a bit overwhelmed and not sure where to start. I’m looking for advice from experienced users who are familiar with multiple Adobe apps. Since the Creative Cloud All Apps subscription is quite expensive, I want to narrow down the tools that will actually support my workflow.
Thanks again—I’m looking forward to any personal suggestions or insights the community can share!
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Allow me to clarify further, addressing your specific questions to the best of my ability.
First off, thanks for the thoughtful breakdown—there’s a lot of valuable nuance in what you’re saying. Let me clarify my use case:
1. Document Dimensions & Format:
2. Output Resolution:
3. Storage Size & Performance:
I want to handle large files efficiently (both viewing and printing), so system performance and compatibility are important.
4. End Use:
These files are for business and archival purposes, shared with clients and stakeholders.
Some end-users will print them; others will only view digitally.
I’d like the documents to look clean and crisp in either scenario.
---
Given all that, I’m open to software or hardware suggestions that can:
Let me know what setup you’d recommend or if there’s anything I should optimize in my workflow.
Thank you again for your thorough analysis of my post and your willingness to help me find a solution that fits my needs. I truly appreciate your support..
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Hi @Mr. Productive, I think we're in different time zones, so please forgive me if I seem to be late responding.
I am struggling to advise you because you want both the biggest and the smallest you can have with extreme efficiency. It's the old marketing conundrum of "Bigger, Faster, Cheaper—pick two!" What you need to do is experiment to obtain the biggest (in this case, more pixels) with efficiency (in this case, smaller size).
Expanding on what I mentioned yesterday. I can take an image that is 8 x 10 inches at 300 dpi (24000 x 30,000 pixels, and let's say that has a storage size of 10 MB. I can manually decrease that size to a thumbnail size (I refer to “manually” as taking a corner and dragging it toward the opposing corner), and even though it is smaller, it will still maintain that 10 MB size. When you go to print that thumbnail, your computer will still be dealing with the storage size of a 10 MB image despite its apparent smaller size.
At this point, I need to point out the difference between what you see on the monitor versus what you print out. You mentioned a 4K monitor. That means it has 4000 pixels across the width. If you open up an image that is (say) 8000 pixels wide, it will display 50% of the pixels it has. If you set that image to be printed at 300 ppi, it will still appear the same way. Pixels on your monitor can only be square, one color, and one level of luminance. Period. Monitors are PPI (Pixels Per Inch) and have no clue about DPI (dots per inch); only printers can handle DPI. Images on digital media can only deal with ppi (pixels per inch).
I mention this because in the early days of the internet, people took their vacation images and sent them to friends. These images might be 3500+ pixels wide, but would "appear" to be much smaller because the software would make the image "fit" in the boundaries of the email as if they were 1000 (or smaller) pixels wide. Yet, they'd still have the storage size of the original 3500-pixel-wide image. Thus, it would take ages for this image to appear in the email — the image had not been properly sized for the task.
What I'm getting at in the above paragraph is getting the most efficient size for the quality you want. I cannot tell you how to do this efficiently, because it’s a balance between the highest quality and how long you want to sit in front of your computer waiting for it to finish any given process with these images.
Oh, let me give you one other stumbling block: compression. You did mention JPG images. JPG images are smaller than their PSD or TIFF companions because they delete every 8th pixel across the image. Actually, they may delete more or less, depending on the amount of compression. Now, that may seem horrible, deleting pixels, and it is. But, often, it doesn’t matter. However, if you have a photo of nothing but leaves and flowers, you’d never be able to see this loss. But if you have a photograph of a telephone pole against a blue sky, you will see a lot of stray pixels floating around the arms of the telephone pole. (You may have also received a flyer in your email that was a JPG image, and the text is fuzzy because the sender over-compressed the image to make it smaller.
But, here’s the deal on compression: if you take an image, make some adjustments, and save it as a JPG. Then the next day, repeat that you are “JPGing a JPG.” In other words, you are increasing the degradation of the image by repeatedly saving the image over and over as a JPG image. You can speed up the degradation process by using a lot of compression the first time around. Using Photoshop’s range of 1 – 10 compression, where 1 is a lot of compression and 10 is (essentially) no compression, a low number is a lot of compression and therefore results in a lot of degradation on the first save. It is generally accepted that “around 7” is a good compromise between a smaller storage size for the image and the least amount of degradation. But this is entirely subjective. What I consider “least,” you may consider complete destruction. (BTW, the way around collective JPGing a JPG is to always save the image in either PSD or TIFF format until you know what the final save is for.)
So, let me sum this up: if you want efficiency, you want a smaller storage size of the image. If you want the best image, you want a lot of pixels. However, below a certain point, you will not observe any significant gains in efficiency; above a certain point, you will not observe any increase in quality.
And for software. Because you are working with images, you need to adjust both their dimensions and the settings of their DPI. Thus, you need Photoshop. The best way to get this into a print format is by taking the images and placing them into InDesign. Here, you can have both the images and any descriptive comments along with page numbers, Table of Contents, Index, or whatever you want. And, when finished, you can press Command/Control-P to print or press Command/Control-E, and you have a PDF where you control the full DPI of any images. I recommend that you get the full Creative Cloud Suite, which will give you far more than you need, and the full Acrobat Pro. Consider this a business expense.
Then, once you have all this software, you will need to experiment with what your objective is and compare it with what you create. Find your happy medium and go for it.
Good luck!
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@Dave Creamer of IDEAS, is correct that you can save PDFs directly from Photoshop. However, these can be two three times larger than if they are done direclty from Acrobat or InDesign. Also, they cannot do multipage PDFs. It will be one-page-at-a-time in PS.
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@gary_sc is correct, of course. I got the idea the OP wanted some sort of archival image (at least some of the time). Naturally, any image editing would have to be in Photohshop or Lightroom. If the OP uses Lightroom, it is a non-distructive editing tool but the XML sidecar file must be archived as well.
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@Dave Creamer of IDEAS, Yes, for archival purposes, LRC is an excellent tool. All of my important photos go into LRC becuase of it's excellent Keywording, image enhancement, and printing capability.
BTW, @Mr. Productive, I just had a chance to look at this video. While the intended subject matter may not seem like it will help you, it is one of the best examinations I've seen on the subject of image sharpness and quality and the dependency of the same on how the image is being viewed. Well worth watching.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d5B48ksp84Q
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Acrobat will work fine for your needs.
For images, you just need to make sure you control or disable any resampling or compression for the best results. You can try some lossless compression and compare file sizes.
For business documents, Acrobat can convert many Microsoft programs into PDFs. You will need the programs installed. These include Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Viso, and more.
If you want to EDIT the images, you should use Photoshop. It can save as PDF directly bypassing Acrobat.
Depending on the program that creates the PDF, you may have vector type and images which will be crisp no matter what the resolution is. For images, anything above 225 ppi would work, but you want to test different (higher) resolutions for highly detailed images to see if they fit your needs.
Divinci Resolve is a video editor, in the same general area as Premiere Pro so I don't know if it really part of this discussion. (Premiere and Resolve are really two different animals but they both edit video).
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BTW, it is more expensive, but you can subscribe on a per-month plan if you are not sure you want to subscribe for a year. But you want to make sure you have time to dedicate to learn the program in that time so you don't waste your money.
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