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Reduce PDF file size : free Acrobat replacement for Leopard

*Well, at least this fits my need*, which to be able to email PDFs of my iWork or Office presentations with both :
*+ acceptable quality*
*+ acceptable file size*



It uses the poorly documented Quartz filtering ability for PDFs in Preview. There are a couple of articles I found here or elsewhere on the web, but they still don't make things simple.

You can manually edit those same settings (using Colorsync Utility) but can also benefit from my trial-and-error process and directly download from my iDisk.
After download and decompressions, *simply drag the downloaded "Filters" folder to your Library folder* (inside your user folder to install it just for this user, or at the root level of your hard disk in order to install it for all users) - And if you already have such a folder, simply copy the contents of the downloaded folder into it.

*Here are the filters :*
* http://idisk.mac.com/jcolas-Public*

Feel free to use, download, copy, use the idea ... in any way you like.

*Then, in order to create a compressed PDF with decent quality :*
+ Open your existing PDF in preview, or Print any document using "Open PDF in Preview" from the PDF pop-up menu in the Print dialog
+ Choose Save As in the File Menu (pretty easy I guess), then choose PDF as format, and one of the "Reduce to XXX dpi ..." Quartz filters, and click Save.

I included 8 settings which produce increasingly large files, with increasingly better quality.
I find the 150 dpi / average JPEG compression to be quite suitable for most purposes.

I have tried (before Leopard) PDF compression software like PDFshrink but was not satisifed with the results and interface.

These filters produce much better (better being in terms of consistency, file size and quality) than the filter Apple includes with Leopard (and maybe Tiger ?).
The Apple "Reduce file size filter" scales images by 50%, with target dimensions between 128 and 512 pixels, which can give very unusable results.

The filters I use 2 two things :
+ resample images to 75, 150, 300 or 600 dpi (I do not not if there is upsampling)
+ compress the images using Jpeg compression at average or low quality
Once installed, you can visualize, edit or copy them using Colorsync Utility (in the Applications/ Utilities folder)

As an example, using a 73 MB PDF from a 55 page Powerpoint presentation, the compressed files have the following sizes :
+ 75 dpi low quality : 2.7 MB
+ 75 dpi average quality : 3.2 MB
+ 150 dpi low quality : 4.2 MB
+ 150 dpi average quality : 5.3 MB
+ 300 dpi low quality : 7.6 MB
+ 300 dpi average quality : 10.2 MB
+ 600 dpi low quality : 16.0 MB
+ 600 dpi average quality : 20.3 MB

Voilà.
I don't think I'll be using Adobe Acrobat anytime soon.

"Thanks" a lot to Adobe for not being able to have a working version of Acrobat on Leopard until next January.
I hope many people (with needs similar to mine) will discover that they don't realy need it.

And I just wonder why Apple does not include these filters in Leopard.
Is this just in order to be nice with Adobe ?

Feedback or comments greatly appreciated.

Jérôme.

MBP 17" 2.4Ghz/4GB, Mac OS X (10.5), and other Macs too

Posted on Dec 15, 2007 3:44 AM

Reply
226 replies

Jul 25, 2011 3:25 AM in response to physci

Lion must have dropped support for filters installed under User's home. With Snow Leopard, I had jcolas' .qfilter files placed under ~/Library/Filters/ and everything worked just fine. However, after upgrading to Lion, the filters disappeared. (Obviously, I was talking about the "Export..." screen, since Lion's Preview app no longer has the "Save as" menu.) Reading your message, I tried moving them to /Library/Filters/, and now they appear again!


Anyone who had the .qfilter files or the Filters folder under their home's ~/Library/, try moving them to /Library/.


Thanks to physci anyway. 🙂



P.S. Lion's Image Capture seems to be enhanced. They now support multi-page scans, and the scans saved in PDF seems slightly smaller. However, these filters are still essential since it can compress them into nearly half! ~900KB -> ~500KB for my 150dpi 2-page document.

Sep 14, 2011 7:09 AM in response to jerome1989

Hi all,


I am new here, and I have the same problem, saving in a PDF format that is of acceptable size to send via email. I read the whole thread, copied the filters into my library but when comes time to print or save as a PDF I don't see any option box with the filters... Am I doing something wrong..?


I am using SL on my MacBook Pro and Lion on my iMac. I only tried this on my MBP as there seems to be difficulties with Lion...


Thanks in advance,


Marc Fillion

Oct 10, 2011 4:37 PM in response to jerome1989

Thanks for finally solving this problem for me. So not fun.


Does anyone know if there is a similar way to PRINT to pdf with such selections?


Unless I am missing something I was able to Open a document and then Save with these options (nice) but is there also a way to Open a series of images and PRINT to pdf with these options?


Also, I gather Acrobat doesn't do any of this on a Mac? I mean it is a paid program but even if I buy it I don't get the functionality in this scripted option?


Thanks for any help.

Oct 12, 2011 9:19 AM in response to BDAqua

Hi BDA,


Thanks. Sorry for dropping in on the thread but I have been trying to solve this for a long time and this is one of two threads where I have found both a way to downsample an existing pdf and to do this by dragging and dropping in bulk over a folder. Both very much needed and very helpful.


I am on Snow Leopard.


And I guess the only thing that I am missing is a way to print to pdf that doesn't involve my opening the images/scans and downsizing them first, or that does not involve my re-opening the pdf.


I'm about to run a search for pdf's by size using WhatSize but I don't think I can drag and drop from there. Also, I don't think Spotlight will let me sort by size.


Will the utility in this post let me drag and drop from Spotlight and leave the pdf's in place but only downsized? Is there a way to do this by size?


Should I move them all to a single folder using Spotlight or a utility called Papers?


Thanks for any help on this. I haven't had any luck with this in attempting answers in other posts or threads.


Regards.

Oct 12, 2011 9:22 AM in response to BDAqua

Hi BDA,


Sorry. Got bit by the Apple backspace forum bug so I lost some text in the previous post. I also notice that I neglected to include the link while also asking a question or two that belongs on the other thread. Sorry.


https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3058047?start=0&tstart=0


Anyway, trying to both get existing pdf's downsampled to manageable size in some way and to make sure that future pdf printing has more control over it. Ideally without having to reopen and resave.

Thanks.

Nov 6, 2011 1:24 PM in response to jerome1989

Thanks Jerome.


After 4 years apparently this is still the best 'free' option out there (as opposed to spending $$ on pdf-shrink).


Adobe 9 pro doesn't seem to do crap with Lion, and/or gives me an error everytime I try to reduce the PDF filesize. Alternatively, any and all changes I try (besides the ones using quartz filters per this thread) also seem to leave the filesize unchanged.


I make powerpoints for students that average about 3MB. The PDFs created on my mac mini average from 3-5MB. This is completely unacceptable since on my windows machine I can make a PDF that is about 200Kb and completely unblurred and readable.


Even with Jerome's solution, on the lowest quality the pics are blurry, and the PDF only reduced to 2MB, which at least IS SMALLER than anything Adobe pro or Lion out of the box seems to be able to do.


Why isn't there a solution that makes my 3MB powerpoints into 200Kb PDFs of good quality like I can do on my old windows system? I realize bandwidth goes up with time, but PDFs on macs seem ridiculously bloated.


Anyway thanks Jerome, your 4 year old solution still seems to be one of the best available for mac users.

Nov 8, 2011 11:17 AM in response to jerome1989

Does anyone know if there is a way to /print/ to pdf with these type of defaults?


I am trying to dig my way out of a year and a half of unknowingly creating 500 MB sized pdf's (I think I got that right, anyway) - I now have this tool to downsample individual pdf's and I found another tool that will do this for existing pdf's in bulk - but is there a way to do this for NEW PDF's that I print from mac?


Also a big thanks for this post...

Nov 9, 2011 1:49 PM in response to jerome1989

Hi All,


I'm a year and a half into my new OS (Snow Leopard from Windows XP) and I have some pdf's that are 900 MB on my drive and I have not been able to get this to work even though I feel like I have enough documentation over here to write a thesis.


I /do/ see the pulldown options but when I open the pdf in Preview, run SaveAs and pulldown to "Reduce to 150 dpi average quality - STANDARD COMPRESSION" I am still getting a 33 page pdf to be 70 MB and it won't go through as an email attachment.


Right now I am using WhatSize to find the biggest offenders and manually going through them one by one but I have to mail a document and it is really important that I get it out and not ask someone to download from ftp because I can't get it together over here enough to manage my pdf sizes...


Can anyone help me out here? I probably have 50+ GB on my hard drive taken up with pdf's at this point and I have just not been able to tackle this on my own...


Thanks,


Jon

Reduce PDF file size : free Acrobat replacement for Leopard

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