Create one clean PDF from photos, receipts, screenshots, or scanned images. The goal is not to chase the smallest possible file or the fanciest format. The useful result is the one that stays readable, opens correctly for the recipient, and solves the upload, sharing, or publishing problem you actually have.
When this matters
This topic usually comes up when a file is rejected by an upload form, loads slowly on a website, is too large for email, or is difficult for someone else to open. Before changing the file, decide what the receiver needs: a smaller file, a different format, separate pages, or a cleaner visual result.
Step-by-step
- Collect the photos you want to include.
- Add them to the image-to-PDF tool in the correct order.
- Create the PDF and download it.
- Open the PDF and confirm page order and readability.
What to check before you send it
- Use clear photos with good lighting.
- Put images in the order you want them to appear.
- Review the PDF before sending so rotated or blurry pages do not slip through.
- Keep the original file until the recipient confirms the new version works.
Try it with FlymeTools
Use the Image to PDF tool to apply this workflow directly in your browser.
Open Image to PDFCommon mistakes
The most common mistake is using the strongest setting or conversion option first. That can create unnecessary quality loss or make the result harder to use. Start with the least destructive option, inspect the output, and only go further when the file still does not meet the requirement.
FAQ
Can I combine JPG and PNG images?
Yes. The image-to-PDF workflow is best for turning multiple common image formats into one document.
What if a photo is sideways?
Rotate or edit the photo first, then create the PDF.
Is this good for receipts?
Yes, as long as the receipt text is readable in the original photo.