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Use this route to bundle photos, scans, or screenshots into one shareable PDF.
Add JPG, PNG, or WebP files and make sure each page candidate appears correctly in preview.
Drag items into final sequence before export so the PDF reads in the intended order.
Choose page settings based on your use case, such as submission-friendly dimensions or print orientation.
Create the document and inspect readability, cropping, and rotation on each page.
Export the PDF and run one real upload test on your target portal or sharing channel.
Use this route when scattered screenshots and photos must become one ordered PDF for a single submission slot.
Your images are assembled into PDF pages entirely in your browser session, without being uploaded to external processing servers.
This local flow is useful for IDs, receipts, and proof bundles where page order and readable details matter.
Choose page layout and quality settings based on readability requirements and strict upload caps.
| Setting choice | Best when | Trade-off |
|---|---|---|
| A4 fit-to-page | Portals expect standard printable page dimensions | Margins and scaling can increase total page count |
| Original-size pages | You must preserve capture framing exactly | Mixed page dimensions can look inconsistent |
| Higher image quality | Fine text, seals, and signatures need crisp output | Larger final PDF size |
| Balanced quality | Routine uploads under moderate size limits | Low-light details may soften slightly |
Image to PDF workflows fail mostly because of page order mistakes, inconsistent framing, and oversized output. A small preflight pass helps you avoid regenerating the same document multiple times.
A clean image-to-PDF pipeline is less about conversion speed and more about predictable page quality, sequence, and submission safety.
If the generated PDF is rejected, debug in this order: size, framing, then page sequence.
Read one focused guide before final upload to avoid common rejection mistakes.
A practical guide to convert JPG, PNG, and WebP files into PDF format for form uploads, sharing, and records.
How to keep image clarity while converting to PDF, with practical settings for scanned documents, IDs, and forms.
Yes. Upload all images, arrange them in order, and generate a single multi-page PDF.
Common image types like JPG, PNG, and WebP are supported in this workflow, with browser-specific handling for other formats.
Use clear source images, avoid over-compression, and choose a page layout that preserves text and signature clarity.
Compress source images first or lower image quality before PDF generation to reduce final file size.
Yes. Reorder images in the queue so pages appear in the exact sequence you need.
Yes. PDF creation runs in-browser, so source images remain on your device.