How to Turn Photos and Scans into a Clean, Print-Ready PDF

By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · File & PDF

Images and documents serve different jobs. A JPG is great for a single snapshot, but the moment you need to submit, archive, or print several pictures together, a PDF is the right container. It bundles multiple pages into one file, fixes their order, and opens the same way on every device and printer. That is why application forms, expense systems, and record-keeping workflows almost always ask for PDFs rather than loose images.

Start by gathering every image you want in the document, then decide the sequence. If you are converting a multi-page scan, order matters, so arrange pages front to back before exporting. Drag-and-drop reordering lets you fix a misplaced page without re-scanning. Mixing orientations is fine: a landscape diagram can sit between portrait pages, and each will render on its own page in the final file.

Next, pick a page mode that matches your goal. Choose fit-to-image when the visual is the point, such as a photography portfolio or a set of product shots, because it crops the page tightly to each picture with no white border. Choose A4 when the file will be printed or filed alongside other documents; A4 measures 210 by 297 mm (8.27 by 11.69 inches) and is the global office standard, so the PDF prints without awkward scaling or clipped edges.

Resolution is what separates a crisp print from a blurry one. A4 at 300 DPI equals roughly 2480 by 3508 pixels, about 8.7 megapixels, which is the benchmark for sharp document and photo printing. If your source image is much smaller than that, stretching it to fill an A4 page will reveal softness or pixelation. For on-screen sharing only, lower resolution is perfectly acceptable since the file is never printed.

Finally, export and review. Because the tool builds the PDF in your browser, the conversion is instant and your files stay private, which matters for receipts, IDs, and signed contracts. Open the finished PDF to confirm the page order, orientation, and sizing look right, then send or save it. If something is off, adjust the order or switch page modes and re-export; nothing is uploaded, so iterating costs you nothing.

Quick tips

  • Rename or pre-sort your image files before adding them so the default order is already close to what you want.
  • Use fit-to-image for photo galleries and A4 for anything you plan to print or attach to a form.
  • Aim for at least 2480 by 3508 pixels per image if the PDF will be printed full-page on A4 at 300 DPI.
  • Photograph receipts and documents in even, flat lighting to avoid shadows that make the converted PDF hard to read.

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