Converting images to PDF is one of the most common PDF workflows. Whether you need to compile screenshots for documentation, create photo albums, or archive visual records, this guide covers the essentials.

When Image to PDF Works Best

Image to PDF conversion is ideal for screenshots, scanned documents, photos for documentation, and visual references. It's less ideal for complex images that need OCR or editing. Plan accordingly based on your output needs.

Step-by-Step Image to PDF Workflow

Follow these steps for clean Image to PDF output:

  1. Collect your images — Gather all images to convert. Common formats include JPG, PNG, and TIFF. Verify image quality before proceeding.
  2. Optimize images if needed — Resize large images to reasonable dimensions. For document PDFs, aim for 150-300 DPI. For viewing, 72-96 DPI is sufficient.
  3. Choose conversion tool — Select a local Image to PDF converter. Choose between single image per page or multi-image per page layouts.
  4. Configure page settings — Set page size (A4, Letter, or custom). Choose orientation. Set margins if needed.
  5. Convert and verify — Generate the PDF and verify images display correctly at different zoom levels.

Image Quality Settings

Choose settings based on your PDF use case:

Use Case Recommended DPI Page Size Compression
Documentation 150 DPI A4 or Letter Medium
Archival 300 DPI Original Low
Quick sharing 72-96 DPI Auto High
Print output 300+ DPI Custom None

"The key to good Image to PDF conversion isn't the tool — it's starting with the right image quality and appropriate settings for your use case."

Common Image Issues

Solve these frequent problems:

  • Blurry images — Use higher resolution source images
  • Huge file sizes — Apply compression or resize dimensions
  • Incorrect orientation — Rotate images before converting
  • Mixed sizes — Normalize to a single page size
Example: Converting photos to PDF
Input: photo-001.jpg, photo-002.jpg
Output: photo-album.pdf
Settings: --page-size A4 --images-per-page 2 --quality high

Batch Image Processing

For multiple images, consider these approaches:

  • Convert all images to a single multi-page PDF
  • Create individual PDFs, then merge them
  • Use sorting by filename for page order
  • Add page numbers automatically