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Old clips to PDF?

Discussion in 'Journalism topics only' started by Joe Williams, Aug 15, 2008.

  1. I've been able to convert my stories into PDF files, but the problem I've run into is taking oversized clips that needed to be scanned at an office store and then converting those into PDFs. They convert just fine, but they take up too much memory. When I e-mail them, my e-mail bounces back because it's too large to be accepted. I haven't figured a way around this problem except to apply by snail mail. It sucks because some of my oversized clips are my best ones.
     
  2. i still find that well-packaged physical packages get more of a response, even from the younger set of editors, than most of my e-mail stuff. maybe that's just me.
     
  3. buckweaver

    buckweaver Active Member

    Easy.

    When you've got your PDF open in Adobe Acrobat, go to "File" > "Reduce File Size." It'll flatten the images and compress it into a file at less than 1MB, which doesn't affect the viewing and should allow you to e-mail with ease.
     
  4. BYH

    BYH Active Member

    Me too.

    [​IMG]

    (sorry could not resist. please resume the regularly scheduled and pertinent thread)
     
  5. Diabeetus

    Diabeetus Active Member

    An easy way to do it on a Mac is go to print in word, scan, whatever you're using . Then you can click on a button "PDF" in the bottom left corner of the prompt screen. It'll give you the option to save as a pdf nice and easy.
     
  6. Jay Sherman

    Jay Sherman Member

    CutePDF http://cutepdf.com/download/CuteWriter.exe

    It's fantastic. You install it, then no program appears but when you're in Microsoft Word, it will show up as a printer. Select it and it'll ask you where you want to save it as a PDF. Basically, it "prints" a PDF by just saving it on your computer. I'm sure I'm making it sound more complicated than it really is, but it's great and free and saves you from a trip to Kinko's.
     
  7. Joe Williams

    Joe Williams Well-Known Member

    In my case, Buck, I do have an all-in-one inkjet that should do a decent job of scanning stuff in. Will have to do some manipulating to get the bigger clips into 8.5x11" size for the scanner glass, but that's doable with reducing the copying size.

    So I'm going to snag that CutePDF program and spend a chunk of my weekend pulling together a job-hunting -- or (sniff :'( ) career-changing -- package of resume/clips. Probably overdue for getting after this and getting out of this.
     
  8. zebracoy

    zebracoy Guest

    My backward system is to scan the clips in, save them as JPGs, open them in Adobe Illustrator and then save that file as a PDF.

    It takes a bit of time, but it isn't hard. It also requires the use of an expensive program rarely anyone has at home, though.
     
  9. I don't receive the "Reduce File Size" option. Do you know if that's because I have a freeware version of Adobe Acrobat?
     
  10. No, it's not even grayed out. It's not there at all. I downloaded version 9 for free and still nothing. Is it possible to tell me what version you have? (Pro 9 or Pro Extended 9 perhaps?)
     
  11. bigpern23

    bigpern23 Well-Known Member

    Journalism five! Alright!
     
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