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Ryukyu
Participant
March 22, 2022
Answered

Large .psb file cannot be saved as .pdf file

  • March 22, 2022
  • 10 replies
  • 57372 views

We have a large banner in Photohop 23.2.2 with dimensions of 24' x 10' (43200px x 18000px) @ 150px/inch.

The file is saved as a .psb.

The printer wants a .pdf file, but we cannot find a way to save/export this file to .pdf.

This is on a Mac Pro with 256 gb of ram, running the latest version of Monterey.

In addition to the layered .psb file, we've flattened it and saved as a .jpg and that still will not save as a .pdf file.

Any ideas??

Correct answer Stephen Marsh
quote

Did you ever find a fix? 


By @Brendan36920345ocaa


For Photoshop PDF - 30,000px on the longest edge is the limit.

10 replies

Participant
December 26, 2024

I just had this same issue when dealing with a very large .psb file. I had no way of exporting as a PDF in photoshop but I was able to send it to Acrobat and export it as a PDF there. Not a great solution but it was a successful workaround. 

wasia85987977
Participant
October 24, 2024

Dear Team,

I would like to request an update for Adobe Photoshop 2024 that allows the export of PSB format files into PDF when they exceed 30K pixels. This would be extremely helpful for handling large-scale projects without the current pixel limitation.

Thank you for considering this feature enhancement.

Best regards,

 

Stephen Marsh
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 24, 2024

@wasia85987977 

 

This is a discussion, not and idea/feature request.

 

You should make a new topic, labelled as an "idea". Users will then vote to help indicate to Adobe how much interest there is (it's an imperfect system at best, but it's what we have).

Participant
April 23, 2024

Did you ever find a fix? 

Stephen Marsh
Community Expert
Stephen MarshCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
April 23, 2024
quote

Did you ever find a fix? 


By @Brendan36920345ocaa


For Photoshop PDF - 30,000px on the longest edge is the limit.

Participant
April 23, 2024

Ah ok, thank you. I will lower the res. See if I can get it down to 30,000. 

 

Kind regards, 

 

Stephen Marsh
Community Expert
Community Expert
September 16, 2023

Consider the reason for the existence of the PSB format in the first place:

 

https://helpx.adobe.com/au/photoshop/using/file-formats.html

 

quote

Large Document Format (PSB)

The Large Document Format (PSB) supports documents up to 300,000 pixels in any dimension. All Photoshop features, such as layers, effects, and filters, are supported. (With documents larger than 30,000 pixels in width or height, some plug-in filters are unavailable.)

You can save HDR, 32-bits-per-channel images as PSB files.

 

Note:

 

Most other applications and older versions of Photoshop cannot support documents with file sizes larger than 2 GB.

 

30,000px on the longest edge or 2GB file size is a good guide when troubleshooting file formats which are not PSB (as well as the standard checks for supported colour mode, bit depth, alpha channels etc).

 

Known Participant
September 12, 2023

Hi I have the same problem. I tried the suggestions here and none worked for me. 

 

Is is problem resolved?

Participant
September 15, 2023

Import the .psb to Indesign, then export to PDF. Works fine! 

Participant
November 1, 2023

Participant
August 26, 2023

Drop the psb into indesign and export to pdf.

Community Expert
March 22, 2022

So you should be able to just do a save as .. and select PDF but I noticed that was missing?

 

Try clicking File>Print )or Command+P) to Print....

then in the Print Dialogue Box click "Print Settings"

then click on "PDF" and select "Save as PDF"

that shoud work! Hope it helps!
cheers!

mark

headTrix, Inc. | Adobe Certified Training & Consulting
Participant
April 28, 2023

File > Print > Print Settings > "Show Details" then create a custom size format under "Paper Size" if needed > PDF

 

If your computer still won't save it as PDF and is being difficult like mine is, instead of clicking PDF at the end, click "Open in Preview" (for Mac). It'll open up a file preview which then can be saved as PDF under File > Save

 

Hope this helps!

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 22, 2022

Indeed. It's very hard to think of a scenario that requires 43 000 pixels.

 

For anything like a normal viewing distance for this size, 50 ppi is more than enough (and even that is probably overkill).

Legend
March 22, 2022

Or reduce the resolution. Clearly they don't expect such a high resolution - way too much for a banner. 

Inspiring
March 22, 2022

Consider this. Split the file into two or four pieces and make separate PDF files.

 

Banner maker should be able to put them back together.