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jaredfromspace4917135
Participating Frequently
September 13, 2019
Question

Can't maintain 300 PPI when creating PDF

  • September 13, 2019
  • 6 replies
  • 2349 views

When I combine multiple 300 PPI files into a PDF in Photoshop CC the resulting PDF file is always 150 PPI. I've been working on this for hours and tried multiple combinations of settings. I've tried with and without the standard downsampling which is only for stuff above 300 PPI so that shouldn't even matter. Can anyone offer insight here? I don't want my files cut in half when I make a PDF document. I'm also having this issue when I combine files as a PDF in Acrobat.

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6 replies

jaredfromspace4917135
Participating Frequently
September 13, 2019

Attempted with these settings. The screenshot with two documents open shows one of the original pages and then the corresponding page when I imported the PDF into Photoshop. Notice that the one from the PDF (Binder1-2) is viewing at 33% while the other is at 16.7% because it's 150 PPI instead of 300. I should specify here that the PDF was created in Acrobat without choosing any option to reduce file size.

 

 

Nancy OShea
Community Expert
Community Expert
September 13, 2019

Your 2nd screenshot (import PDF) shows resolution at 150 not 300.

 

Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
jaredfromspace4917135
Participating Frequently
September 13, 2019
This was opening the PDF in photoshop to look at the file details
Conrad_C
Community Expert
Community Expert
September 14, 2019
Thank you! I appreciate the information. You are absolutely correct about the Import PDF field saving the last opened values. When I try your suggestion of using the Edit PDF tool in Acrobat and opening image elements in Photoshop, it's showing the correct 300 PPI for images where I know that should be true, but strangely 150 PPI for anything with a lot of text. This whole thing started when I realized PDFs were viewing differently than their component files when compared at actual size (100%) but it seems their individual parts maintain the same information.

If color images are showing 300 ppi, but images containing text show 150 ppi, the next two questions are: Are the 150 ppi images grayscale files, and in the Export PDF compression settings, are grayscale images set to downsample to 150 ppi? If that's the case, then try setting grayscale images to 300 ppi too.

 

[Edit] Sorry, I just remembered that you're creating a PDF from Photoshop. I'm used to other PDF export settings, like in InDesign, where they break out downsampling settings for color, grayscale, and monochrome images. But I see when you create a PDF presentation, theres only one downsampling option in the Compression panel, not three. So I'm confused about that. I'm not sure if the Photoshop PDF export settings are downsampling non-color images differently without options.

Legend
September 13, 2019

No idea how you can combine multiple (different?)  into a PDF in Photoshop, unless you place them in layers of the same document. Oh wait, you are talking about the automate command PDF Presentation? Well there is the limitation, it is preset to use a lower resolution for easy sharing or web use. I suggest you to combine separate PDFs directly in Acrobat Pro.

Regarding resolution when you Save as Photoshop PDF a warning appears and then a panel where you can set the resolution.

For Print or for 300ppi images, it is recommended you choose Print quality preset, then you can use a PDF/X standard and a PDF version for compatibility, below yiiu will see the final or PDF resolutioin for raster content, it will say 300ppi. You can change it of course to any value.

Once you have a resolution, that value will be used on the PDF. 

 

jaredfromspace4917135
Participating Frequently
September 13, 2019
Thank you, this seems to be exactly what I'm doing. I generally use Acrobat to create PDFs but the result is the same. Two 300 PPI files combine into a 150 PPI PDF with settings that look like what you have above and seems to match my screenshots.
jaredfromspace4917135
Participating Frequently
September 13, 2019

Here are some screenshots. I even tried to reset my Photoshop preferences to get to Adobe Preset [High Quality Print] without the (Modified). I can't tell how I've modified it or how to reset that, but the rest of the preferences are pretty standard to my knowledge.

jaredfromspace4917135
Participating Frequently
September 13, 2019
Sorry this posted backwards. The image upload on this site isn't the best. The first photo (should be the last) shows that one of the files is 300 PPI and two of those pages together winds up being 150 PPI when combined into a PDF
Nancy OShea
Community Expert
Community Expert
September 13, 2019

Go to File > SaveAs > PDF.  See screenshot.

Which PDF Preset are you using?

Which compression settings?

Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
jaredfromspace4917135
Participating Frequently
September 13, 2019
Thank you mine looks like this!
mglush
Community Expert
Community Expert
September 13, 2019

Hi! Let's see if we can figure it out!

 

Can you show a screenshot of your PDF settings in PS? What version of Phtoshop are you using?

Michelle

jaredfromspace4917135
Participating Frequently
September 13, 2019
Thank you mglush I've attached screenshots below