![]() ![]() To see a detailed analysis of the content of your PDF, click on the Audit Space Usage button located at the upper-right corner of the PDF Optimizer dialog. For many PDFs, the majority of the file size is contained in the graphic files. To know where to concentrate your digital weight loss efforts, it’s handy to know where most of the file size is contained. The PDF Optimizer provides plenty of control over file size and quality, so choose Advanced>PDF Optimizer to open the dialog. Your goal-and challenge-is to minimize quality loss while maximizing file size reduction. You’ll want to carefully consider which combination of these techniques you’ll employ to decrease the size of the PDF. Performing a simple Save As will often result in the deletion of unnecessary file components that have been retained in the PDF, dramatically reducing the file size without any reduction in the PDF’s output quality.įurther reducing the file size of this PDF can involve a combination of removing document components, reducing the resolution of contained images, and compressing file components. View this new PDF’s file size in the Document Properties dialog and it’s now 43.85 MB-about 40% smaller than the original file. You could create another PDF if you had the original layout files, or you can use the following Acrobat 9 tools to repurpose your PDF.Ĭhoose File>Save As to save this PDF as another PDF (we named ours Brochure_Web_1). Notice the current file size in this example is 73.29 MB-fine for commercial printing, but you’ll want to make this PDF substantially smaller to make it appropriate for sending or viewing over the Internet. To determine its file size, choose File>Properties (Command-D ) and view the Advanced section of the Description tab. ![]() In Acrobat 9, open a commercial, print-oriented PDF (here a two-page brochure with uncompressed, 300-ppi, CMYK images). You can use Acrobat 9 to adjust the content and characteristics of a print-oriented PDF to repurpose it for just such a use. ![]() Prepress-bound PDFs are usually large files with high linear resolutions and CMYK color spaces that aren’t optimized for other uses, such as sending via email or viewing on the Web. PDFs are created with specific output in mind. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |