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Swimmer63
New Participant
April 16, 2019
Answered

When Creating Multi-Page PDF from Multiple Files - How to make pages uniform size?

  • April 16, 2019
  • 1 reply
  • 5996 views

I am creating a single, 8 page PDF from a number of 1-3 page files.  Some pages are images files, photos, some are already pdf's.  When the pages are combined in a single pdf, the pages that were photos, are twice the size of the pages that were not.  How do I get all the pages to the same uniform size?

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Correct answer gary_sc

Total sense. And the “photos of text” was my issue.

So I went back to the image files and resized them to 50%, then created a

pdf of the reduced image file. In the 8 page document I replaced the

oversized page with the 50% page and it was almost the same size as the

others.

So problem solved. But I appreciate the explanation.

Thanks!


Hi Swimmer,

One last thing: if you have a "photo" of text, do you know you can convert that to "searchable text" with Acrobat?

That will not only dramatically decrease the storage size of the document but it will also let you copy text and search within the PDF.

Do to that, select the "Enhanced Scans" work tab and then select "Recognize Text" option (found on the top of the page (below the icons)).

Let me know if this helps,

1 reply

Swimmer63
Swimmer63Author
New Participant
April 16, 2019

By the way, this is for Adobe Acrobat Pro 2017, Windows Desktop Version.  Old school.

gary_sc
Community Expert
April 16, 2019

Hi Swimmer,

Language can be complicated: when you say "the pages that were photos, are twice the size of the pages that were not" are you referring to measurement size or storage size(e.g., 8" x 11'5" OR 115 kb).

If the issue is storage size, the answer is simple: images are bitmapped images. That is they are composed of thousands of pixels and each one is a data bit. Text, on the other hand, are vector images where each segment of a pixel is one data bit. Therefore, a picture of text is significantly larger in storage size than standard text that can be resized.

Also, here's a piece of trivia: if you take a bitmapped image and double the measurement size (e.g., 4" x 5" to 8" x 10") the same image will then be 4 TIMES the storage size.

Does any of this help?

gary_sc
gary_scCorrect answer
Community Expert
April 16, 2019

Total sense. And the “photos of text” was my issue.

So I went back to the image files and resized them to 50%, then created a

pdf of the reduced image file. In the 8 page document I replaced the

oversized page with the 50% page and it was almost the same size as the

others.

So problem solved. But I appreciate the explanation.

Thanks!


Hi Swimmer,

One last thing: if you have a "photo" of text, do you know you can convert that to "searchable text" with Acrobat?

That will not only dramatically decrease the storage size of the document but it will also let you copy text and search within the PDF.

Do to that, select the "Enhanced Scans" work tab and then select "Recognize Text" option (found on the top of the page (below the icons)).

Let me know if this helps,