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Pdf shrink blank area
Pdf shrink blank area








pdf shrink blank area

I had the same PDF file placed 87 times, right? (One time for each page… for example, you can specify which page of a PDF you want to place by choosing Show Import Options from the Place dialog box.) The coolest part of the whole troubleshooting experience was that I learned something about the Links panel that I never knew (or, if I knew it, I had completely forgotten). I tried this and exported a new PDF with the same settings, and - you saw this coming, didn’t you? - the file was 6 MB.ĭoes that mean placing any PDF file adds a bit of “document overhead” and that placing the equivalent INDD file is always better? I haven’t had time to try it. You can, after all, place an INDD file into InDesign just as easily as a PDF file. So I wondered what would happen if I replaced the pages of the PDF with the original InDesign document itself. In this case, it’s an 87-page issue, so the PDF was placed 87 times, and 87 times a little bit of overhead equals… yup, you got it! When exploring the size issue, I had a sudden thought: What if there is a bit of “overhead” in each one of those PDF pages… and that overhead gets included into the final PDF, too.

pdf shrink blank area

In this case, the 2-up version of the magazine was created by taking the one-up PDF and placing it into an InDesign document (2 pages of the PDF per single InDesign page, of course), like this: But why was it so large to begin with? What caused all that overhead? I’ll spare you my myriad troubleshooting steps, and jump to the punchline. Okay, so it was fun to see the file size drop to 6 MB (a perfectly reasonable size for a magazine of this size). Again, check out the Drop 20 Pounds article I mentioned above. One of the most common reasons PDF files are too large is that people don’t understand they need to change the image compression settings. I need to take a moment and say that document overhead is certainly not the only (or even most common) form of bloated PDF files. (I didn’t change image compression, or fonts, or any other settings.) In this case, the file dropped from 94 MB to 6 MB, without any apparent change in quality or function. I have not found any reliable sources to describe what this “overhead” is, but at this rate it sounds like the overhead at some military contractors!įortunately, you can remove much of the overhead. In the PDF Optimizer dialog box, turn on the Discard User Data checkbox, and then turn on Discard Document Information and Metadata. In the case of this mysterious 94 MB file, when I audited how space was being used, I found that something called Document Overhead was taking up 92.62% of the file size. (Remind me sometime to mention how I dislike words like “usage” and “utilize.”) If you open a PDF and choose Advanced > PDF Optimizer (at least that’s where it is in Acrobat 9… I still haven’t gotten around to installing Acrobat X yet), you’ll see a button labeled Audit Space Usage.

pdf shrink blank area

I have an interest in making svelte files, as evidenced by an article that I wrote with Mike Rankin called “ Drop 20 Pounds with InDesign.” In that article, we mentioned Acrobat’s PDF Optimizer feature, but we neglected to point out a really cool feature inside that dialog box. Tracking down the problem led me to learn a couple of interesting things about PDF files from InDesign - and a really cool InDesign trick that I never knew about - things which you may want to be aware of. That did seem odd, as the interactive version was only about 34 MB. For example, this morning the wonderful and very capable Terri Stone (the magazine’s editor in chief, who also ends up doing far too much of the production work herself) wrote me asking why the 2-up “print” version of this issue was weighing in at 95 MB. Sometimes my role as co-founder and Editorial Director of InDesign Magazine takes me beyond editorial decisions.










Pdf shrink blank area