

However, the earlier suggestion to remove hidden information.
Adobe acrobat not cropping for final print pdf#
Ideally, 150 DPI should be good enough for images of 2500X2500 pixel - on a 17 inch monitor set to 1366x768 resolution.īTW, the PDF file shall print each page at the specified DPI of that page. In the latest version of Acrobat (at least with v10) printing to pdf from pdf is not supported. If in the new PDF pages are too small to read on-screen without zooming, again - redo DPI adjustment, this time put a lower DPI value. If in the new PDF images are too big - redo the DPI setting for each to a higher value. Open relevant image print control dialog box and set a suitable uniform DPI info for all the images. I need to be able to save it split up into the 9 differant pages so I can take it to a print shop and have it printed on water-resistant paper.

I want to save the file split up as if I was direct printing a poster to 8.5x11 paper. To avoid this, open each image in an image editor like GIMP or Photoshop. To change the paper size for your printer, DO NOT click on the File menu at the top of the window and then select Print. I have a large pdf that is a topographical map. Only first 30 pages are rendered by default. The good news is - it's only a display issue - and can be fixed easily.Īn image with a higher DPI value would display smaller in a PDF (displays at the 'print-size' of the image). Pages are rendered on top of each other, blended, so you can easily determine the crop size that matches all pages. The page sizes are looking different in your PDF because the images were originally set to different DPI (even if images are identical HxW in pixels).
