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Convert jpg to pdf document size change

Community Beginner ,
Dec 03, 2019 Dec 03, 2019

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I was just wondering if someone could help me get my head around what I'm finding happens when I convert JPG to PDF with Acrobat.

I've exported a 5cm x 21cm document from illustrator as a JPG set to 300ppi, if I open the image in Photoshop I can see the image dimensions match that. If I then create a PDF from that JPG with Acrobat, the PDF's document size changes to 20.847cm x 87.515cm - the image is being changed to 72ppi. I'm wondering why that is happening as I need the document properties to remain 5cm x 21cm at 300dpi.

I know I can export straight to PDF from illustrator and the resulting PDF have the correct properties, I was just more wanting to get my head around what/why the conversion from JPG to PDF would do what it's doing.

Thanks

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Community Expert ,
Dec 03, 2019 Dec 03, 2019

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Hi,

 

Just tested on my end and the resolution remained as per the original.

 

The methods I used were drag the jpg onto the Acrobat icon and File > Create > PDF from file.

 

hth

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Community Beginner ,
Dec 03, 2019 Dec 03, 2019

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How strange, I'm taking the same steps and the Page Size in Properties shoots up within the PDF. However if I export back to JPG from the converted PDF the resulting JPG is the correct resolution, dpi and physical dimensions.

It's not really an issue as there's a way around it, I'm just interested in why it's doing it.

It's only really apparent if I print the converted PDF and set the scaling to "None" to try and get it to print at my required dimensions - obviously with the Page Size shooting up it would no longer have the correct native size.

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Community Expert ,
Dec 03, 2019 Dec 03, 2019

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If you need to control the dimensions and resolution of the PDF, save as PDF from Photoshop, do not directly convert using Acrobat.

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New Here ,
Dec 05, 2022 Dec 05, 2022

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I have the same problem. Why is the pdf dimension bigger than the original jpg?

I don't have a way around. I have no Photoshop and make my images in paint.net.

Is there a FREE way of doing this without getting into expensive suscriptions? I don't do this commercially, just one conversion per year or so. 

Thanks

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LEGEND ,
Dec 05, 2022 Dec 05, 2022

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But this whole question is about converting with Acrobat - and problems with that. If you aren't paying, you aren't going to see that issue. Acrobat isn't free, only Acrobat Reader.

Yes, there are free solutions. No, it's not appropriate in Adobe's forums to send people to non-Adobe products!

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