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Does Acrobat Pro have a way to convert PDFs to true black and white? When I look in the "convert colors" function in print production it has grayscale, but I don't see black and white as an option. I've been searching for fixes and every tutorial and question/answer I find only converts to grayscale; does Acrobat not have the capability to convert to ture black and white?
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Hi Sandrah,
Just out of curiosity, what is your goal, what are you hoping to achieve?
FWIW, B&W and grayscale are almost synonymous. I say "almost" becuase absolute B&W means that all antialiasing is converted to black as well. This is text at 200% the top one has antialiasing the bottom one is converted to absolute B&W. Are you sure you want that?
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I am aware that black and white means no shades in between, that's why I specified that I did not want grayscale. I want the only colors in the document to be 100% white and 100% black, aliasing is fine.
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Two thoughts: can you get what you want from the original application that made the document?
If not, do you have access to Photoshop?
Also, what do you plan on doing with shades that will end up 50% gray? Average them up or down?
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It sounds like what you're telling me is that it is not possible to convert to black and white inside if Acrobat Pro, is that correct?
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Hi,
take a look at the post below to see if it provides a solution for you....
https://pdf.iskysoft.com/convert-pdf/convert-pdf-to-black-and-white.html
Regards,
Mike
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That's what @gary_sc is saying. Transforming a document from colour to greyscale is simply applying a transfer function to each colour information in the document. To transform a document from greyscale to pure black and white involves a lot more decisions to be taken. None of those decisions is limited to a simple mathematical transfer function but involves so much more and especially arbitrarily decisions like where is the threshold between converting the grey shade to black or to white.
Those decisions are best taken at the "final" output device like the printer, as the printer engine has information about the physical limitations.
So for offering a solution, it would really be helpful to answer the questions that Gary did ask as they will influence the solution one can propose.
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It is very touching to see "professionals" support each other even when they are wrong... But you seem a little better than Gary, so you confirm that Adobe can't do what Google do for all his books on Google Books ? When Adobe will offer this option ? 2067 ?
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The fact that they're telling me Adobe in the 2020s can't do what took 2 clicks for Corel in the mid-90s, and what any scanner can do, is highly suspect.
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The fact that they're telling me Adobe in the 2020s can't do what took 2 clicks for Corel in the mid-90s, and what any scanner can do, is highly suspect.
By @sandrah80731053
Obviously, you do not understand the problem. A scanner scans bitmaps. The operator defines a threshold. What is below that threshold is white (background), what is above is black (foreground). And it's a point on an image file. A PDF holds text and graphics in complex settings, like an ad in a newspaper. Converting that to black and white in the PDF (so not greyscale, which is obviously what black and white television is about!) is contra productive. You will have items not visible when doing so. Or you will need to raster and dither your vector graphics and text, which is counterproductive.
Adobe Acrobat won't offer this.
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It is very touching to see "professionals" support each other even when they are wrong... But you seem a little better than Gary, so you confirm that Adobe can't do what Google do for all his books on Google Books ? When Adobe will offer this option ? 2067 ?
By @Cerbo24878402260w
Sure, you can do any transform you want, but may be Acrobat is not the tool you should use for this.
I don't know what “Google does” for all “his” books. What I know is that in my 30+ years of professional services, I've never seen the need to do what has been asked, as this is best done on the output level.
Imagine a text in colour, the colour translate to greyscale: Red nearer to black, orange nearer to white. Now transform that into black and white only at a 50% threshold. The red text will be black, the orange text will be white. Simple. Orange text will disappear.
What I was asking for was if 49% grey is considered white or black, and the same for 51%, 55%, 45% and all values in between 0.0001% and 99.9999%.
That is a legitimate question and proves that probably the OP has asked the wrong question.
Greetings,
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It's difficult to understand when we are sure to know everything... What is "black and white" ? For many people, it is what Google do with Google Books. Take a look. You have scanned books where the paper is brown, old, then the page of the PDF generated by Google is TOTALLY white, only the letters are black. This is "black and white" for many of us... And you will see (if you are not blind), it is not, not "almost", not "a few", not "a little", greyscale... Greyscale is less useful for reading, and also it is causing problems with printing (but I don't think you print and read any books in your life...)... So when people ask "black and white", say "Adobe cannot do what Google do", even if Adobe create a "new" version of his software each year and sell it 1000€/year... and not "people you are dumb, know what you do, use greyscale, etc."....
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Cerbo,
You never did tell me what the "end goal" of your B&W desire was for. But, if your goal was to "get the brown out," then 2-bit conversion is NOT the best way to do that.
And OCR software does work better with grayscale than it does with 2-bit color.
So, do you want quality text, white backgrounds, and easy to both read text and better OCR or do you want 2-bit text?
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It's difficult to understand when we are sure to know everything...
By @Cerbo24878402260w
It's obvious that you do not understand the issue.
What does Google with books? How do they produce “their” Google books? They SCAN old books, as of your saying, in BITMAP and put that into a PDF. I've done that 20 years ago with faxes. Faxes got scanned and transformed into PDF files (by my fax machine) and distributed via e-mail. The transformation was done before converting into PDF. Google does the same: Scan in bitmap→Convert to PDF. When you have a colour or greyscale document, transformation into pixel map (bitmap for true black and white) is best done by the printing device (or the display device). Why? Because the printer's engine best knows the optimal parameters to do that.
So, could I build jumping cars? Yes. Is it useful? No.
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I don't understand what you are saying, but I understand you think you can said what is useful for people and what is not, what is useful for users and what is not... Surely you work for Adobe, which don't solve problems of his users and imagine useful things for imaginary users. Or try politics next time... What is evident is that Adobe don't want to convert in black and white, something that Google and Word (see another of my message) do in 1 second...
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Yes, it is possible. Here's how:
- Download this file (I can't attach it here directly, unfortunately).
- In Acrobat (Pro), go to Tools - Print Production - Preflight.
- Click Options - Import Preflight Profile and select the file you downloaded earlier.
- A new item will appear under Custom Profiles, called "Convert to B&W".
- Open your PDF file and then run this Preflight Profile on it by clicking on "Analyze & Fix".
- When it's done save the new file under a new name, and you're done!
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I ran this through preflight, and it gave the response "Preflight profile "Convert to BW" did not find any errors or warnings", but it also didn't seem to change the file at all, it is still grayscale. My goal is to convert text scanned in grayscale over to 000000/FFFFFF and nothing else.
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I understood your request, and it's working well for me... Maybe the fixup it uses needs to be created manually.
Are you able to edit it? It's called "Convert color to B&W".
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It does have an edit button in the preflight menu, and when I click on that I get a window tells me that it's unlocked, the name and author, but I don't see anything to actually edit there.
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Can you send a screenshot of what you're seeing, please?
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Do you see this when you enter the Profile?
If so, what happens when you click the Edit button under the selected fixup?
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Here are the instructions on how to create the Fixup needed for the Preflight profile I shared above:
- In the Profile settings, select Fixups and then click on New Fixup:
- As the name enter "Convert color to B&W"
- As the action select "Convert Colors", under "Color spaces, spot colors, inks".
- Select the following settings:
- Click OK, and then add the newly created fixup to the profile:
Notice there might already be similar one called "Convert color to B/W" (with a "/" instead of an "&"), so make sure to use the right one. The fixup will then appear in the middle column, and the profile can be saved and used on your file!
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Maybe a solution I have find, but I have not tried it full. I'm working with an old version of Acrobat.
Open the PDF in Word (2016, maybe 2010 also)... Sometimes Word doesn't change the fonts, and you can "black and white" each page... Then you can save in PDF, and your PDF is black and white.
If Word alters the PDF (I can't find how to tell him "don't do that"), maybe you can try that : save the PDF in Acrobat in JPG (or PNG ?)... Then add all the JPG files in Word, "black and white" them with the option for that in "Images" you know, and then save in PDF, your PDF will be black and white... Maybe a few long, and I had problem to save all the PDF in JPG with my old Acrobat version, but in theory, it works...
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Solution that worked for me after some time of trying:
1) Open your PDF in ADobe
2) In Adobe - File -> Export To -> Image and select JPG
this will export each page as a separate image in a separate JPG file
3) In Windows Explorer navigate to the file, right click onk the file name select Open With -> Paint and open one image
4) In Paint select File -> Save As -> Save As Type -> Monochrome Bitmap
Now you have a pure black and white image in a bitmap file. You can open this in Paint and save as JPG. Then add multiple pages back to a new PDF and combine into a new PDF file.
Shame that ADOBE, as expensive as it is, cannot do monochrome bitmap conversions like good old (30 year old at least) MS Paint does.
3)
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Your operation will destroy the PDF. If that's your goal, go ahead. But please don't compare apples and oranges. And you can't do it with a 30-year-old MS Paint. You need a more modern version.