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A simple and free way of reducing PDF file size using Preview

Note: this is a copy and update of a 5 year old discussion in the Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard discussions which you can find here: https://discussions.apple.com/thread/1292868


This is a simple and free solution I found to reduce the file size of PDFs in OS X, without the high cost and awful UI of Acrobat Pro, and with acceptable quality. I still use it every day, although I have Acrobat Pro as part of Adove Creative Cloud subscription.


Since quite a few people have found it useful and keep asking questions about the download location and destination of the filters, which have changed since 2007, I decided to write this update, and put it in this more current forum.


Here is how to install it:


Here is the appropriate location for the filters:

This assumes that your startup disk's name is "Macintosh HD". If it is different, just replace "Macintosh HD" with the name of your startup disk.

  • If you are running Lion or Mountain Lion (OS X 10.7.x or 10.8.x) then you should put the downloaded filters in "Macintosh HD/Library/PDF Services". This folder should already exist and contain files. Once you put the downloaded filters there, you should have for example one file with the following path:
    "Macintosh HD/Library/PDF Services/Reduce to 150 dpi average quality - STANDARD COMPRESSION.qfilter"
  • If you are running an earlier vesion of OS X (10.6.x or earlier), then you should put the downloaded filters in "Macintosh HD/Library/Filters" and you should have for example one file with the following path:
    "Macintosh HD/Library/Filters/Reduce to 150 dpi average quality - STANDARD COMPRESSION.qfilter"


Here is how to use it:

  • Open a PDF file using Apple's Preview app,
  • Choose Export (or Save As if you have on older version of Mac OS X) in the File menu,
  • Choose PDF as a format
  • In the "Quartz Filter" drop-down menu, choose a filter "Reduce to xxx dpi yyy quality"; "Reduce to 150 dpi average quality - STANDARD COMPRESSION" is a good trade-off between quality and file size


Here is how it works:

  • These are Quartz filters made with Apple Colorsinc Utility.
  • They do two things:
    • downsample images contained in a PDF to a target density such as 150 dpi,
    • enable JPEG compression for those images with a low or medium setting.


Which files does it work with?

It works with most PDF files. However:

  • It will generally work very well on unoptimized files such as scans made with the OS X scanning utility or PDFs produced via OS X printing dialog.
  • It will not further compress well-optimized (comrpessed) files and might create bigger files than the originals,
  • For some files it will create larger files than the originals. This can happen in particular when a PDF file contains other optomizations than image compression. There also seems to be a bug (reported to Apple) where in certain circumstances images in the target PDF are not JPEG compressed.


What to do if it does not work for a file (target PDF is too big or even larger than the original PDF)?

  • First,a good news: since you used a Save As or Export command, the original PDF is untouched.
  • You can try another filter for a smaller size at the expense of quality.
  • The year being 2013, it is now quite easy to send large files through the internet using Dropbox, yousendit.com, wetransfer.com etc. and you can use these services to send your original PDF file.
  • There are other ways of reducing the size of a PDF file, such as apps in the Mac App store, or online services such as the free and simple http://smallpdf.com


What else?

Feel free to use/distribute/package in any way you like.

MacBook Pro with Retina display, OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.2), and other Macs too

Posted on Apr 16, 2013 9:34 AM

Reply
82 replies

Jun 26, 2014 7:54 PM in response to jerome1989

Hi all. This method is a great idea. Thanks to Jerome for this great contribution!


Is anyone else having trouble with Mavericks? I first followed the old instructions, and copied the filters to ~/Library/Filters. Then when I started preview, I got the spinning beach ball. After about 10 seconds, it stopped. The preview window was present, but the menu bar did not show preview. Expose did not show preview. I quit the window. I can see it via "ps -axf | grep -i preview" and kill it accordingly.


So I thought maybe it did not work with my Mavericks. No problem. I removed the Filters folder. (It was not previously present, I had created it). Then logged out, logged back in. Still today when I start preview, I get the spinning beach ball followed by now menu, and unusable preview.


If anyone else has this trouble, and found a fix, please share.

Jun 27, 2014 12:49 PM in response to captwiggum

I have found that the above problem is limited to the command line opener. In other words, if I open apps via dashboard or launch pad, then all is well. But if I open via cmd line "$ open blah.png" then the above problems occur. This problem persists for any type of file opened, such as jpg, pdf, docx, etc.


So how is it, that simply copying some new quartz filters into ~/Library/Filters broke my command line opener? Any hints appreciated.

Jul 20, 2014 1:01 AM in response to wfstephens

Hi wfstephens.


In 10.9.x (and probably 10.10) there is a "PDF Services" folder on your hard drive.

It is in the "Macintosh HD/Library" folder, or whatever the name of your hard drive is /Library.


If you are looking in the Library directory within your home folder (the one with a house icon), it is normal that there is no PDF Services folder.


:-)

Aug 5, 2014 12:39 PM in response to *Q

This is a nice utility, but I have to say that, half the time I use it, it makes my pdf file bigger. Sometimes a LOT bigger. A lot of us see that. So when it makes it smaller, great, smiles, and kudos. But when it doesn't, I guess I'll just shrug. It really surprises me that, to my knowledge, there is no explanation of what kind of pdf file this utility works well on, and what kind of pdf file it doesn't.

Sep 20, 2014 12:49 AM in response to jerome1989

Thank you soooo much for taking the time and effort to share this with everyone, Jérôme!! I remember your post from over a year ago and how kind you were to help me when I had issues installing it back then. I just had my computer restored to factory settings and right away one of the very helpful things I required was the ability to easily reduce PDF file sizes. I am so happy and thankful to see your very helpful post here. Your instructions are very clear, easy to follow and it worked right away for me 🙂 I see previous commenters have offered you candy to thank you LOL If you're ever visiting Toronto I would love to grab coffee with you to thank you.

Karen

Jun 21, 2015 6:22 PM in response to jerome1989

Hello Jerome,

Thank you for reposting this, again.

I have saved all of your info, so I can try this on PDFs I create using OS X Preview in the future.

Great info and procedures on how to reduce PDF file sizes without having to purchase very costly Adobe Acrobat Pro.

I bought Acrobat Pro for a much earlier Acrobat version. i used it, but did not like it or its interface much.

So glad you found a way to introduce some of Acrobat's functionality into the OS X Preview app.

Good Stuff!!!

🙂

A simple and free way of reducing PDF file size using Preview

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