How to crop permanently in Acrobat?
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After cropping anything by using the crop tool in Adobe Acrobat, how do I ensure that the cropped area is fixed and can't be seen even when I increase the crop margin?
For example: how would I crop the following example (image and text) to ensure the image and the part "I don't want to include this text" are really removed, and not hidden somewhere in the result?
Adobe Reader's crop tool only seems to hide the cropped part; it does not really remove it:
pdf adobe-acrobat
add a comment |
After cropping anything by using the crop tool in Adobe Acrobat, how do I ensure that the cropped area is fixed and can't be seen even when I increase the crop margin?
For example: how would I crop the following example (image and text) to ensure the image and the part "I don't want to include this text" are really removed, and not hidden somewhere in the result?
Adobe Reader's crop tool only seems to hide the cropped part; it does not really remove it:
pdf adobe-acrobat
1
Could you post a screenshot or anything to further explain what you're trying to resize and where you're watching it in?
– Ivo Flipse♦
Apr 5 '10 at 12:51
add a comment |
After cropping anything by using the crop tool in Adobe Acrobat, how do I ensure that the cropped area is fixed and can't be seen even when I increase the crop margin?
For example: how would I crop the following example (image and text) to ensure the image and the part "I don't want to include this text" are really removed, and not hidden somewhere in the result?
Adobe Reader's crop tool only seems to hide the cropped part; it does not really remove it:
pdf adobe-acrobat
After cropping anything by using the crop tool in Adobe Acrobat, how do I ensure that the cropped area is fixed and can't be seen even when I increase the crop margin?
For example: how would I crop the following example (image and text) to ensure the image and the part "I don't want to include this text" are really removed, and not hidden somewhere in the result?
Adobe Reader's crop tool only seems to hide the cropped part; it does not really remove it:
pdf adobe-acrobat
pdf adobe-acrobat
edited Oct 9 '17 at 21:17
Hennes
59.5k793144
59.5k793144
asked Apr 5 '10 at 12:49
metal gear solidmetal gear solid
3,85244102170
3,85244102170
1
Could you post a screenshot or anything to further explain what you're trying to resize and where you're watching it in?
– Ivo Flipse♦
Apr 5 '10 at 12:51
add a comment |
1
Could you post a screenshot or anything to further explain what you're trying to resize and where you're watching it in?
– Ivo Flipse♦
Apr 5 '10 at 12:51
1
1
Could you post a screenshot or anything to further explain what you're trying to resize and where you're watching it in?
– Ivo Flipse♦
Apr 5 '10 at 12:51
Could you post a screenshot or anything to further explain what you're trying to resize and where you're watching it in?
– Ivo Flipse♦
Apr 5 '10 at 12:51
add a comment |
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
Using Adobe Acrobat X
You can do this with a Preflight fixup. It is annoying to set up, but pretty
easy to use after that.
Tools
Print Production
Preflight
Select single fixups
Options
Create New Preflight Fixup
- Name
Permanent crop
- Fixup category
Pages
- Type of fixup
Set page geometry boxes
- Source
MediaBox
- Destination
Relative to TrimBox
(meaning "use the dimensions of the TrimBox"). - OK
- Fix
How to REALLY crop a PDF
2
This is the best answer! Works. If you are looking for setting to crop box just replace the destination to be CropBox. Keep all values at zero because it is a relative setup.
– Eran Marom
Jun 25 '15 at 9:11
The linked tutorial page is provides much more details and is really helpful. Thank you.
– Xin
Apr 18 '16 at 20:03
It cost me a while and some frustration before I discovered this: the numbers you enter should be NEGATIVE. So for example, if you want to remove the left 2 inches of the page, you should enter Left: "-2" (Unit: inch). (This was what worked for me; YMMV.)
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:34
Also, in addition to the above steps, you also have to Remove hidden information (see some of the answers below). Otherwise, there will still be hidden text/images in the cropped-out areas, as you can see if you click on "Edit PDF".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:36
For Acrobat DC (latest version of Acrobat), it's (5) Pagebox: "MediaBox"; and (6) Dimension based on: "Relative to TrimBox".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:52
add a comment |
In Acrobat DC,
Type "redact" in the Search Tools... field at the top of the right sidebar, then choose "Remove Hidden Information."
In Acrobat X,
- Tools
Protection
Hidden Information
Remove Hidden Information
It works with me...
If the purpose is just to hide the information that was cropped, this works.
But if you want to actually make the page smaller, this doesn't do that.
The full document is still the original size, with the cropped portions turned white.
Using Adobe Acrobat 9,
- Create a temporary folder, place the pdf to be cropped there
- Crop the file using Adobe Acrobat
- Open the Adobe cropped pdf file
- Select File -> Export -> Image -> PNG
- Click "Save"
- Go into the temporary folder, select all the PNG files, right click select "Combine supported files in Acrobat"
- Click "Combine files"
- Save the newly combined file. This file has is permanently cropped and is of the same quality as the original
8
This tool rasterizes my vector graphics in Adobe Acrobat X. Not useful for me...
– krlmlr
May 29 '12 at 10:04
Excellent answer, it works for me. The problem is that after I do it, my file is ten times bigger! What happened!?
– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:34
Ha, but then, I "save as reduced size pdf" and the size is now .2 times the original size. For clarity, the original (from scanner) was2.01M
, the sanitized was23.15M
, and the sanitized, reduced is.44M
. ::wags head::
– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:36
As mentioned, the Tool rasterizes my vector graphics. How do I prevent the vectors from getting rasterized ?
– harveyslash
Aug 20 '14 at 15:08
add a comment |
The simplest way is to print as PDF (again) the cropped document. Since the crop tool of Acrobat just hides the area from printing, the resulting new PDF document will not show the hidden areas anymore.
In the latest version of Acrobat (at least with v10) printing to pdf from pdf is "not supported". However, the earlier suggestion to remove hidden information and objects using the "protection" area of the tool box was helpful. Specifically, it removed the items I was trying to crop out. However, I have yet to find a way to change page size in a permanent way using the latest version of Acrobat Pro.
1
I was able toprint
to another PDF today for a cropped page in version 10.1.0, and in the print properties I was able to change the pagesize.
– Lance Roberts
Jul 25 '11 at 17:32
add a comment |
Go to Document → Examine Document.
There you can press "remove" to delete the hidden information.
Note that in Acrobat 8, this does remove entire elements but not image data that is outside the cropped area. It seems to work more as you’d expect in Acrobat 9 and later. Always verify!
– Nicholas Riley
Mar 25 '14 at 0:13
add a comment |
Adobe pdf's retain pieces of information often when you don't want it too... there was even a case recently where the military where blacking out text but in a second layer, which once removed made a lot of classified information readable.
Its hard to tell what adobe keeps and doesn't, if there is information you don't want in the pdf I think your best bet is not to put it there in the first place... if it is a picture, copy it out of adobe, crop it, and paste it back into a brand new pdf.
I'm not entirely sure that any of the listed tools will actually crop it properly like you want.
Do you have other Adobe tools? I had this problem before when preparing a phone bill for someone else. I only wanted to generate the pieces pertinent to that person. I ended up doing it offline (as Dan suggested) and then creating another, new PDF file. I think you can even crop using Windows Paint...
– nicorellius
Apr 6 '10 at 18:09
@nic and Dan: for some testing in another question, the OP wanted to crop text (and maybe some graphics), while still being able to select (and copy) the remaining non-cropped text... (Difficult, if not impossible.)
– Arjan
Apr 6 '10 at 20:23
add a comment |
I found this AppleScript on another site Mac Production Artist Tips and Scripts
:
tell application "Adobe Acrobat Pro"
tell active doc
repeat with i from 1 to count of pages
tell page i
set cbox to crop box
set media box to cbox
end tell
end repeat
end tell
end tell
Hope that helps. It's crazy that there's no easily accessible method to ACTUALLY crop pages in Acrobat.
I needed to modify it because I needed to crop to the trim box thus:
tell application "Adobe Acrobat Pro"
tell active doc
repeat with i from 1 to count of pages
tell page i
set tbox to trim box
set media box to tbox
end tell
end repeat
end tell
end tell
add a comment |
I built a tool that handles basic redaction free PDF Redaction tool. When you upload the document, it gives you the ability to draw redaction marks and on the way out flattens it completely removing any embedded information and sanitizes metadata. You could use this to crop the page, just be ware that this will rasterize any vector graphics you have on the page.
Thanks for the heads up. In OP's case it looks like the goal is to crop within a page size. To achieve that effect, you could draw large white strokes to white out the area, however, this will not actually change the size of the page. It will also fully rasterize your document, so if you have vector graphics this won't specifically work.
– levinology
Jan 31 at 8:25
add a comment |
I have had some success cropping and then printing to Adobe PDF in my printer selection. This is an option that I believe comes with a full version of Acrobat. There are many other programs and downloads that can provide such a "printer".
add a comment |
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8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Using Adobe Acrobat X
You can do this with a Preflight fixup. It is annoying to set up, but pretty
easy to use after that.
Tools
Print Production
Preflight
Select single fixups
Options
Create New Preflight Fixup
- Name
Permanent crop
- Fixup category
Pages
- Type of fixup
Set page geometry boxes
- Source
MediaBox
- Destination
Relative to TrimBox
(meaning "use the dimensions of the TrimBox"). - OK
- Fix
How to REALLY crop a PDF
2
This is the best answer! Works. If you are looking for setting to crop box just replace the destination to be CropBox. Keep all values at zero because it is a relative setup.
– Eran Marom
Jun 25 '15 at 9:11
The linked tutorial page is provides much more details and is really helpful. Thank you.
– Xin
Apr 18 '16 at 20:03
It cost me a while and some frustration before I discovered this: the numbers you enter should be NEGATIVE. So for example, if you want to remove the left 2 inches of the page, you should enter Left: "-2" (Unit: inch). (This was what worked for me; YMMV.)
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:34
Also, in addition to the above steps, you also have to Remove hidden information (see some of the answers below). Otherwise, there will still be hidden text/images in the cropped-out areas, as you can see if you click on "Edit PDF".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:36
For Acrobat DC (latest version of Acrobat), it's (5) Pagebox: "MediaBox"; and (6) Dimension based on: "Relative to TrimBox".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:52
add a comment |
Using Adobe Acrobat X
You can do this with a Preflight fixup. It is annoying to set up, but pretty
easy to use after that.
Tools
Print Production
Preflight
Select single fixups
Options
Create New Preflight Fixup
- Name
Permanent crop
- Fixup category
Pages
- Type of fixup
Set page geometry boxes
- Source
MediaBox
- Destination
Relative to TrimBox
(meaning "use the dimensions of the TrimBox"). - OK
- Fix
How to REALLY crop a PDF
2
This is the best answer! Works. If you are looking for setting to crop box just replace the destination to be CropBox. Keep all values at zero because it is a relative setup.
– Eran Marom
Jun 25 '15 at 9:11
The linked tutorial page is provides much more details and is really helpful. Thank you.
– Xin
Apr 18 '16 at 20:03
It cost me a while and some frustration before I discovered this: the numbers you enter should be NEGATIVE. So for example, if you want to remove the left 2 inches of the page, you should enter Left: "-2" (Unit: inch). (This was what worked for me; YMMV.)
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:34
Also, in addition to the above steps, you also have to Remove hidden information (see some of the answers below). Otherwise, there will still be hidden text/images in the cropped-out areas, as you can see if you click on "Edit PDF".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:36
For Acrobat DC (latest version of Acrobat), it's (5) Pagebox: "MediaBox"; and (6) Dimension based on: "Relative to TrimBox".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:52
add a comment |
Using Adobe Acrobat X
You can do this with a Preflight fixup. It is annoying to set up, but pretty
easy to use after that.
Tools
Print Production
Preflight
Select single fixups
Options
Create New Preflight Fixup
- Name
Permanent crop
- Fixup category
Pages
- Type of fixup
Set page geometry boxes
- Source
MediaBox
- Destination
Relative to TrimBox
(meaning "use the dimensions of the TrimBox"). - OK
- Fix
How to REALLY crop a PDF
Using Adobe Acrobat X
You can do this with a Preflight fixup. It is annoying to set up, but pretty
easy to use after that.
Tools
Print Production
Preflight
Select single fixups
Options
Create New Preflight Fixup
- Name
Permanent crop
- Fixup category
Pages
- Type of fixup
Set page geometry boxes
- Source
MediaBox
- Destination
Relative to TrimBox
(meaning "use the dimensions of the TrimBox"). - OK
- Fix
How to REALLY crop a PDF
edited Dec 27 '16 at 10:16
karel
9,439103339
9,439103339
answered Nov 29 '14 at 3:31
Steven PennySteven Penny
1
1
2
This is the best answer! Works. If you are looking for setting to crop box just replace the destination to be CropBox. Keep all values at zero because it is a relative setup.
– Eran Marom
Jun 25 '15 at 9:11
The linked tutorial page is provides much more details and is really helpful. Thank you.
– Xin
Apr 18 '16 at 20:03
It cost me a while and some frustration before I discovered this: the numbers you enter should be NEGATIVE. So for example, if you want to remove the left 2 inches of the page, you should enter Left: "-2" (Unit: inch). (This was what worked for me; YMMV.)
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:34
Also, in addition to the above steps, you also have to Remove hidden information (see some of the answers below). Otherwise, there will still be hidden text/images in the cropped-out areas, as you can see if you click on "Edit PDF".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:36
For Acrobat DC (latest version of Acrobat), it's (5) Pagebox: "MediaBox"; and (6) Dimension based on: "Relative to TrimBox".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:52
add a comment |
2
This is the best answer! Works. If you are looking for setting to crop box just replace the destination to be CropBox. Keep all values at zero because it is a relative setup.
– Eran Marom
Jun 25 '15 at 9:11
The linked tutorial page is provides much more details and is really helpful. Thank you.
– Xin
Apr 18 '16 at 20:03
It cost me a while and some frustration before I discovered this: the numbers you enter should be NEGATIVE. So for example, if you want to remove the left 2 inches of the page, you should enter Left: "-2" (Unit: inch). (This was what worked for me; YMMV.)
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:34
Also, in addition to the above steps, you also have to Remove hidden information (see some of the answers below). Otherwise, there will still be hidden text/images in the cropped-out areas, as you can see if you click on "Edit PDF".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:36
For Acrobat DC (latest version of Acrobat), it's (5) Pagebox: "MediaBox"; and (6) Dimension based on: "Relative to TrimBox".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:52
2
2
This is the best answer! Works. If you are looking for setting to crop box just replace the destination to be CropBox. Keep all values at zero because it is a relative setup.
– Eran Marom
Jun 25 '15 at 9:11
This is the best answer! Works. If you are looking for setting to crop box just replace the destination to be CropBox. Keep all values at zero because it is a relative setup.
– Eran Marom
Jun 25 '15 at 9:11
The linked tutorial page is provides much more details and is really helpful. Thank you.
– Xin
Apr 18 '16 at 20:03
The linked tutorial page is provides much more details and is really helpful. Thank you.
– Xin
Apr 18 '16 at 20:03
It cost me a while and some frustration before I discovered this: the numbers you enter should be NEGATIVE. So for example, if you want to remove the left 2 inches of the page, you should enter Left: "-2" (Unit: inch). (This was what worked for me; YMMV.)
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:34
It cost me a while and some frustration before I discovered this: the numbers you enter should be NEGATIVE. So for example, if you want to remove the left 2 inches of the page, you should enter Left: "-2" (Unit: inch). (This was what worked for me; YMMV.)
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:34
Also, in addition to the above steps, you also have to Remove hidden information (see some of the answers below). Otherwise, there will still be hidden text/images in the cropped-out areas, as you can see if you click on "Edit PDF".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:36
Also, in addition to the above steps, you also have to Remove hidden information (see some of the answers below). Otherwise, there will still be hidden text/images in the cropped-out areas, as you can see if you click on "Edit PDF".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:36
For Acrobat DC (latest version of Acrobat), it's (5) Pagebox: "MediaBox"; and (6) Dimension based on: "Relative to TrimBox".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:52
For Acrobat DC (latest version of Acrobat), it's (5) Pagebox: "MediaBox"; and (6) Dimension based on: "Relative to TrimBox".
– Kenny LJ
Feb 2 '18 at 2:52
add a comment |
In Acrobat DC,
Type "redact" in the Search Tools... field at the top of the right sidebar, then choose "Remove Hidden Information."
In Acrobat X,
- Tools
Protection
Hidden Information
Remove Hidden Information
It works with me...
If the purpose is just to hide the information that was cropped, this works.
But if you want to actually make the page smaller, this doesn't do that.
The full document is still the original size, with the cropped portions turned white.
Using Adobe Acrobat 9,
- Create a temporary folder, place the pdf to be cropped there
- Crop the file using Adobe Acrobat
- Open the Adobe cropped pdf file
- Select File -> Export -> Image -> PNG
- Click "Save"
- Go into the temporary folder, select all the PNG files, right click select "Combine supported files in Acrobat"
- Click "Combine files"
- Save the newly combined file. This file has is permanently cropped and is of the same quality as the original
8
This tool rasterizes my vector graphics in Adobe Acrobat X. Not useful for me...
– krlmlr
May 29 '12 at 10:04
Excellent answer, it works for me. The problem is that after I do it, my file is ten times bigger! What happened!?
– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:34
Ha, but then, I "save as reduced size pdf" and the size is now .2 times the original size. For clarity, the original (from scanner) was2.01M
, the sanitized was23.15M
, and the sanitized, reduced is.44M
. ::wags head::
– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:36
As mentioned, the Tool rasterizes my vector graphics. How do I prevent the vectors from getting rasterized ?
– harveyslash
Aug 20 '14 at 15:08
add a comment |
In Acrobat DC,
Type "redact" in the Search Tools... field at the top of the right sidebar, then choose "Remove Hidden Information."
In Acrobat X,
- Tools
Protection
Hidden Information
Remove Hidden Information
It works with me...
If the purpose is just to hide the information that was cropped, this works.
But if you want to actually make the page smaller, this doesn't do that.
The full document is still the original size, with the cropped portions turned white.
Using Adobe Acrobat 9,
- Create a temporary folder, place the pdf to be cropped there
- Crop the file using Adobe Acrobat
- Open the Adobe cropped pdf file
- Select File -> Export -> Image -> PNG
- Click "Save"
- Go into the temporary folder, select all the PNG files, right click select "Combine supported files in Acrobat"
- Click "Combine files"
- Save the newly combined file. This file has is permanently cropped and is of the same quality as the original
8
This tool rasterizes my vector graphics in Adobe Acrobat X. Not useful for me...
– krlmlr
May 29 '12 at 10:04
Excellent answer, it works for me. The problem is that after I do it, my file is ten times bigger! What happened!?
– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:34
Ha, but then, I "save as reduced size pdf" and the size is now .2 times the original size. For clarity, the original (from scanner) was2.01M
, the sanitized was23.15M
, and the sanitized, reduced is.44M
. ::wags head::
– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:36
As mentioned, the Tool rasterizes my vector graphics. How do I prevent the vectors from getting rasterized ?
– harveyslash
Aug 20 '14 at 15:08
add a comment |
In Acrobat DC,
Type "redact" in the Search Tools... field at the top of the right sidebar, then choose "Remove Hidden Information."
In Acrobat X,
- Tools
Protection
Hidden Information
Remove Hidden Information
It works with me...
If the purpose is just to hide the information that was cropped, this works.
But if you want to actually make the page smaller, this doesn't do that.
The full document is still the original size, with the cropped portions turned white.
Using Adobe Acrobat 9,
- Create a temporary folder, place the pdf to be cropped there
- Crop the file using Adobe Acrobat
- Open the Adobe cropped pdf file
- Select File -> Export -> Image -> PNG
- Click "Save"
- Go into the temporary folder, select all the PNG files, right click select "Combine supported files in Acrobat"
- Click "Combine files"
- Save the newly combined file. This file has is permanently cropped and is of the same quality as the original
In Acrobat DC,
Type "redact" in the Search Tools... field at the top of the right sidebar, then choose "Remove Hidden Information."
In Acrobat X,
- Tools
Protection
Hidden Information
Remove Hidden Information
It works with me...
If the purpose is just to hide the information that was cropped, this works.
But if you want to actually make the page smaller, this doesn't do that.
The full document is still the original size, with the cropped portions turned white.
Using Adobe Acrobat 9,
- Create a temporary folder, place the pdf to be cropped there
- Crop the file using Adobe Acrobat
- Open the Adobe cropped pdf file
- Select File -> Export -> Image -> PNG
- Click "Save"
- Go into the temporary folder, select all the PNG files, right click select "Combine supported files in Acrobat"
- Click "Combine files"
- Save the newly combined file. This file has is permanently cropped and is of the same quality as the original
edited Jan 29 '18 at 20:54
Baodad
4611513
4611513
answered Jun 22 '11 at 11:03
ssassa
11912
11912
8
This tool rasterizes my vector graphics in Adobe Acrobat X. Not useful for me...
– krlmlr
May 29 '12 at 10:04
Excellent answer, it works for me. The problem is that after I do it, my file is ten times bigger! What happened!?
– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:34
Ha, but then, I "save as reduced size pdf" and the size is now .2 times the original size. For clarity, the original (from scanner) was2.01M
, the sanitized was23.15M
, and the sanitized, reduced is.44M
. ::wags head::
– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:36
As mentioned, the Tool rasterizes my vector graphics. How do I prevent the vectors from getting rasterized ?
– harveyslash
Aug 20 '14 at 15:08
add a comment |
8
This tool rasterizes my vector graphics in Adobe Acrobat X. Not useful for me...
– krlmlr
May 29 '12 at 10:04
Excellent answer, it works for me. The problem is that after I do it, my file is ten times bigger! What happened!?
– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:34
Ha, but then, I "save as reduced size pdf" and the size is now .2 times the original size. For clarity, the original (from scanner) was2.01M
, the sanitized was23.15M
, and the sanitized, reduced is.44M
. ::wags head::
– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:36
As mentioned, the Tool rasterizes my vector graphics. How do I prevent the vectors from getting rasterized ?
– harveyslash
Aug 20 '14 at 15:08
8
8
This tool rasterizes my vector graphics in Adobe Acrobat X. Not useful for me...
– krlmlr
May 29 '12 at 10:04
This tool rasterizes my vector graphics in Adobe Acrobat X. Not useful for me...
– krlmlr
May 29 '12 at 10:04
Excellent answer, it works for me. The problem is that after I do it, my file is ten times bigger! What happened!?
– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:34
Excellent answer, it works for me. The problem is that after I do it, my file is ten times bigger! What happened!?
– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:34
Ha, but then, I "save as reduced size pdf" and the size is now .2 times the original size. For clarity, the original (from scanner) was
2.01M
, the sanitized was 23.15M
, and the sanitized, reduced is .44M
. ::wags head::– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:36
Ha, but then, I "save as reduced size pdf" and the size is now .2 times the original size. For clarity, the original (from scanner) was
2.01M
, the sanitized was 23.15M
, and the sanitized, reduced is .44M
. ::wags head::– Limited Atonement
Nov 16 '12 at 17:36
As mentioned, the Tool rasterizes my vector graphics. How do I prevent the vectors from getting rasterized ?
– harveyslash
Aug 20 '14 at 15:08
As mentioned, the Tool rasterizes my vector graphics. How do I prevent the vectors from getting rasterized ?
– harveyslash
Aug 20 '14 at 15:08
add a comment |
The simplest way is to print as PDF (again) the cropped document. Since the crop tool of Acrobat just hides the area from printing, the resulting new PDF document will not show the hidden areas anymore.
In the latest version of Acrobat (at least with v10) printing to pdf from pdf is "not supported". However, the earlier suggestion to remove hidden information and objects using the "protection" area of the tool box was helpful. Specifically, it removed the items I was trying to crop out. However, I have yet to find a way to change page size in a permanent way using the latest version of Acrobat Pro.
1
I was able toprint
to another PDF today for a cropped page in version 10.1.0, and in the print properties I was able to change the pagesize.
– Lance Roberts
Jul 25 '11 at 17:32
add a comment |
The simplest way is to print as PDF (again) the cropped document. Since the crop tool of Acrobat just hides the area from printing, the resulting new PDF document will not show the hidden areas anymore.
In the latest version of Acrobat (at least with v10) printing to pdf from pdf is "not supported". However, the earlier suggestion to remove hidden information and objects using the "protection" area of the tool box was helpful. Specifically, it removed the items I was trying to crop out. However, I have yet to find a way to change page size in a permanent way using the latest version of Acrobat Pro.
1
I was able toprint
to another PDF today for a cropped page in version 10.1.0, and in the print properties I was able to change the pagesize.
– Lance Roberts
Jul 25 '11 at 17:32
add a comment |
The simplest way is to print as PDF (again) the cropped document. Since the crop tool of Acrobat just hides the area from printing, the resulting new PDF document will not show the hidden areas anymore.
In the latest version of Acrobat (at least with v10) printing to pdf from pdf is "not supported". However, the earlier suggestion to remove hidden information and objects using the "protection" area of the tool box was helpful. Specifically, it removed the items I was trying to crop out. However, I have yet to find a way to change page size in a permanent way using the latest version of Acrobat Pro.
The simplest way is to print as PDF (again) the cropped document. Since the crop tool of Acrobat just hides the area from printing, the resulting new PDF document will not show the hidden areas anymore.
In the latest version of Acrobat (at least with v10) printing to pdf from pdf is "not supported". However, the earlier suggestion to remove hidden information and objects using the "protection" area of the tool box was helpful. Specifically, it removed the items I was trying to crop out. However, I have yet to find a way to change page size in a permanent way using the latest version of Acrobat Pro.
edited Jul 13 '11 at 12:04
Edmund's Echo
32
32
answered Oct 28 '10 at 4:24
marcomarco
5911
5911
1
I was able toprint
to another PDF today for a cropped page in version 10.1.0, and in the print properties I was able to change the pagesize.
– Lance Roberts
Jul 25 '11 at 17:32
add a comment |
1
I was able toprint
to another PDF today for a cropped page in version 10.1.0, and in the print properties I was able to change the pagesize.
– Lance Roberts
Jul 25 '11 at 17:32
1
1
I was able to
print
to another PDF today for a cropped page in version 10.1.0, and in the print properties I was able to change the pagesize.– Lance Roberts
Jul 25 '11 at 17:32
I was able to
print
to another PDF today for a cropped page in version 10.1.0, and in the print properties I was able to change the pagesize.– Lance Roberts
Jul 25 '11 at 17:32
add a comment |
Go to Document → Examine Document.
There you can press "remove" to delete the hidden information.
Note that in Acrobat 8, this does remove entire elements but not image data that is outside the cropped area. It seems to work more as you’d expect in Acrobat 9 and later. Always verify!
– Nicholas Riley
Mar 25 '14 at 0:13
add a comment |
Go to Document → Examine Document.
There you can press "remove" to delete the hidden information.
Note that in Acrobat 8, this does remove entire elements but not image data that is outside the cropped area. It seems to work more as you’d expect in Acrobat 9 and later. Always verify!
– Nicholas Riley
Mar 25 '14 at 0:13
add a comment |
Go to Document → Examine Document.
There you can press "remove" to delete the hidden information.
Go to Document → Examine Document.
There you can press "remove" to delete the hidden information.
edited Nov 3 '11 at 16:52
slhck
164k47452477
164k47452477
answered Nov 9 '10 at 16:46
HuaHua
9911
9911
Note that in Acrobat 8, this does remove entire elements but not image data that is outside the cropped area. It seems to work more as you’d expect in Acrobat 9 and later. Always verify!
– Nicholas Riley
Mar 25 '14 at 0:13
add a comment |
Note that in Acrobat 8, this does remove entire elements but not image data that is outside the cropped area. It seems to work more as you’d expect in Acrobat 9 and later. Always verify!
– Nicholas Riley
Mar 25 '14 at 0:13
Note that in Acrobat 8, this does remove entire elements but not image data that is outside the cropped area. It seems to work more as you’d expect in Acrobat 9 and later. Always verify!
– Nicholas Riley
Mar 25 '14 at 0:13
Note that in Acrobat 8, this does remove entire elements but not image data that is outside the cropped area. It seems to work more as you’d expect in Acrobat 9 and later. Always verify!
– Nicholas Riley
Mar 25 '14 at 0:13
add a comment |
Adobe pdf's retain pieces of information often when you don't want it too... there was even a case recently where the military where blacking out text but in a second layer, which once removed made a lot of classified information readable.
Its hard to tell what adobe keeps and doesn't, if there is information you don't want in the pdf I think your best bet is not to put it there in the first place... if it is a picture, copy it out of adobe, crop it, and paste it back into a brand new pdf.
I'm not entirely sure that any of the listed tools will actually crop it properly like you want.
Do you have other Adobe tools? I had this problem before when preparing a phone bill for someone else. I only wanted to generate the pieces pertinent to that person. I ended up doing it offline (as Dan suggested) and then creating another, new PDF file. I think you can even crop using Windows Paint...
– nicorellius
Apr 6 '10 at 18:09
@nic and Dan: for some testing in another question, the OP wanted to crop text (and maybe some graphics), while still being able to select (and copy) the remaining non-cropped text... (Difficult, if not impossible.)
– Arjan
Apr 6 '10 at 20:23
add a comment |
Adobe pdf's retain pieces of information often when you don't want it too... there was even a case recently where the military where blacking out text but in a second layer, which once removed made a lot of classified information readable.
Its hard to tell what adobe keeps and doesn't, if there is information you don't want in the pdf I think your best bet is not to put it there in the first place... if it is a picture, copy it out of adobe, crop it, and paste it back into a brand new pdf.
I'm not entirely sure that any of the listed tools will actually crop it properly like you want.
Do you have other Adobe tools? I had this problem before when preparing a phone bill for someone else. I only wanted to generate the pieces pertinent to that person. I ended up doing it offline (as Dan suggested) and then creating another, new PDF file. I think you can even crop using Windows Paint...
– nicorellius
Apr 6 '10 at 18:09
@nic and Dan: for some testing in another question, the OP wanted to crop text (and maybe some graphics), while still being able to select (and copy) the remaining non-cropped text... (Difficult, if not impossible.)
– Arjan
Apr 6 '10 at 20:23
add a comment |
Adobe pdf's retain pieces of information often when you don't want it too... there was even a case recently where the military where blacking out text but in a second layer, which once removed made a lot of classified information readable.
Its hard to tell what adobe keeps and doesn't, if there is information you don't want in the pdf I think your best bet is not to put it there in the first place... if it is a picture, copy it out of adobe, crop it, and paste it back into a brand new pdf.
I'm not entirely sure that any of the listed tools will actually crop it properly like you want.
Adobe pdf's retain pieces of information often when you don't want it too... there was even a case recently where the military where blacking out text but in a second layer, which once removed made a lot of classified information readable.
Its hard to tell what adobe keeps and doesn't, if there is information you don't want in the pdf I think your best bet is not to put it there in the first place... if it is a picture, copy it out of adobe, crop it, and paste it back into a brand new pdf.
I'm not entirely sure that any of the listed tools will actually crop it properly like you want.
answered Apr 5 '10 at 14:02
JarvinJarvin
5,90554062
5,90554062
Do you have other Adobe tools? I had this problem before when preparing a phone bill for someone else. I only wanted to generate the pieces pertinent to that person. I ended up doing it offline (as Dan suggested) and then creating another, new PDF file. I think you can even crop using Windows Paint...
– nicorellius
Apr 6 '10 at 18:09
@nic and Dan: for some testing in another question, the OP wanted to crop text (and maybe some graphics), while still being able to select (and copy) the remaining non-cropped text... (Difficult, if not impossible.)
– Arjan
Apr 6 '10 at 20:23
add a comment |
Do you have other Adobe tools? I had this problem before when preparing a phone bill for someone else. I only wanted to generate the pieces pertinent to that person. I ended up doing it offline (as Dan suggested) and then creating another, new PDF file. I think you can even crop using Windows Paint...
– nicorellius
Apr 6 '10 at 18:09
@nic and Dan: for some testing in another question, the OP wanted to crop text (and maybe some graphics), while still being able to select (and copy) the remaining non-cropped text... (Difficult, if not impossible.)
– Arjan
Apr 6 '10 at 20:23
Do you have other Adobe tools? I had this problem before when preparing a phone bill for someone else. I only wanted to generate the pieces pertinent to that person. I ended up doing it offline (as Dan suggested) and then creating another, new PDF file. I think you can even crop using Windows Paint...
– nicorellius
Apr 6 '10 at 18:09
Do you have other Adobe tools? I had this problem before when preparing a phone bill for someone else. I only wanted to generate the pieces pertinent to that person. I ended up doing it offline (as Dan suggested) and then creating another, new PDF file. I think you can even crop using Windows Paint...
– nicorellius
Apr 6 '10 at 18:09
@nic and Dan: for some testing in another question, the OP wanted to crop text (and maybe some graphics), while still being able to select (and copy) the remaining non-cropped text... (Difficult, if not impossible.)
– Arjan
Apr 6 '10 at 20:23
@nic and Dan: for some testing in another question, the OP wanted to crop text (and maybe some graphics), while still being able to select (and copy) the remaining non-cropped text... (Difficult, if not impossible.)
– Arjan
Apr 6 '10 at 20:23
add a comment |
I found this AppleScript on another site Mac Production Artist Tips and Scripts
:
tell application "Adobe Acrobat Pro"
tell active doc
repeat with i from 1 to count of pages
tell page i
set cbox to crop box
set media box to cbox
end tell
end repeat
end tell
end tell
Hope that helps. It's crazy that there's no easily accessible method to ACTUALLY crop pages in Acrobat.
I needed to modify it because I needed to crop to the trim box thus:
tell application "Adobe Acrobat Pro"
tell active doc
repeat with i from 1 to count of pages
tell page i
set tbox to trim box
set media box to tbox
end tell
end repeat
end tell
end tell
add a comment |
I found this AppleScript on another site Mac Production Artist Tips and Scripts
:
tell application "Adobe Acrobat Pro"
tell active doc
repeat with i from 1 to count of pages
tell page i
set cbox to crop box
set media box to cbox
end tell
end repeat
end tell
end tell
Hope that helps. It's crazy that there's no easily accessible method to ACTUALLY crop pages in Acrobat.
I needed to modify it because I needed to crop to the trim box thus:
tell application "Adobe Acrobat Pro"
tell active doc
repeat with i from 1 to count of pages
tell page i
set tbox to trim box
set media box to tbox
end tell
end repeat
end tell
end tell
add a comment |
I found this AppleScript on another site Mac Production Artist Tips and Scripts
:
tell application "Adobe Acrobat Pro"
tell active doc
repeat with i from 1 to count of pages
tell page i
set cbox to crop box
set media box to cbox
end tell
end repeat
end tell
end tell
Hope that helps. It's crazy that there's no easily accessible method to ACTUALLY crop pages in Acrobat.
I needed to modify it because I needed to crop to the trim box thus:
tell application "Adobe Acrobat Pro"
tell active doc
repeat with i from 1 to count of pages
tell page i
set tbox to trim box
set media box to tbox
end tell
end repeat
end tell
end tell
I found this AppleScript on another site Mac Production Artist Tips and Scripts
:
tell application "Adobe Acrobat Pro"
tell active doc
repeat with i from 1 to count of pages
tell page i
set cbox to crop box
set media box to cbox
end tell
end repeat
end tell
end tell
Hope that helps. It's crazy that there's no easily accessible method to ACTUALLY crop pages in Acrobat.
I needed to modify it because I needed to crop to the trim box thus:
tell application "Adobe Acrobat Pro"
tell active doc
repeat with i from 1 to count of pages
tell page i
set tbox to trim box
set media box to tbox
end tell
end repeat
end tell
end tell
edited Jun 21 '10 at 18:57
answered Jun 21 '10 at 18:38
Lorin RiversLorin Rivers
1193
1193
add a comment |
add a comment |
I built a tool that handles basic redaction free PDF Redaction tool. When you upload the document, it gives you the ability to draw redaction marks and on the way out flattens it completely removing any embedded information and sanitizes metadata. You could use this to crop the page, just be ware that this will rasterize any vector graphics you have on the page.
Thanks for the heads up. In OP's case it looks like the goal is to crop within a page size. To achieve that effect, you could draw large white strokes to white out the area, however, this will not actually change the size of the page. It will also fully rasterize your document, so if you have vector graphics this won't specifically work.
– levinology
Jan 31 at 8:25
add a comment |
I built a tool that handles basic redaction free PDF Redaction tool. When you upload the document, it gives you the ability to draw redaction marks and on the way out flattens it completely removing any embedded information and sanitizes metadata. You could use this to crop the page, just be ware that this will rasterize any vector graphics you have on the page.
Thanks for the heads up. In OP's case it looks like the goal is to crop within a page size. To achieve that effect, you could draw large white strokes to white out the area, however, this will not actually change the size of the page. It will also fully rasterize your document, so if you have vector graphics this won't specifically work.
– levinology
Jan 31 at 8:25
add a comment |
I built a tool that handles basic redaction free PDF Redaction tool. When you upload the document, it gives you the ability to draw redaction marks and on the way out flattens it completely removing any embedded information and sanitizes metadata. You could use this to crop the page, just be ware that this will rasterize any vector graphics you have on the page.
I built a tool that handles basic redaction free PDF Redaction tool. When you upload the document, it gives you the ability to draw redaction marks and on the way out flattens it completely removing any embedded information and sanitizes metadata. You could use this to crop the page, just be ware that this will rasterize any vector graphics you have on the page.
edited Jan 31 at 8:18
answered Jan 31 at 7:48
levinologylevinology
1113
1113
Thanks for the heads up. In OP's case it looks like the goal is to crop within a page size. To achieve that effect, you could draw large white strokes to white out the area, however, this will not actually change the size of the page. It will also fully rasterize your document, so if you have vector graphics this won't specifically work.
– levinology
Jan 31 at 8:25
add a comment |
Thanks for the heads up. In OP's case it looks like the goal is to crop within a page size. To achieve that effect, you could draw large white strokes to white out the area, however, this will not actually change the size of the page. It will also fully rasterize your document, so if you have vector graphics this won't specifically work.
– levinology
Jan 31 at 8:25
Thanks for the heads up. In OP's case it looks like the goal is to crop within a page size. To achieve that effect, you could draw large white strokes to white out the area, however, this will not actually change the size of the page. It will also fully rasterize your document, so if you have vector graphics this won't specifically work.
– levinology
Jan 31 at 8:25
Thanks for the heads up. In OP's case it looks like the goal is to crop within a page size. To achieve that effect, you could draw large white strokes to white out the area, however, this will not actually change the size of the page. It will also fully rasterize your document, so if you have vector graphics this won't specifically work.
– levinology
Jan 31 at 8:25
add a comment |
I have had some success cropping and then printing to Adobe PDF in my printer selection. This is an option that I believe comes with a full version of Acrobat. There are many other programs and downloads that can provide such a "printer".
add a comment |
I have had some success cropping and then printing to Adobe PDF in my printer selection. This is an option that I believe comes with a full version of Acrobat. There are many other programs and downloads that can provide such a "printer".
add a comment |
I have had some success cropping and then printing to Adobe PDF in my printer selection. This is an option that I believe comes with a full version of Acrobat. There are many other programs and downloads that can provide such a "printer".
I have had some success cropping and then printing to Adobe PDF in my printer selection. This is an option that I believe comes with a full version of Acrobat. There are many other programs and downloads that can provide such a "printer".
edited Nov 29 '14 at 4:03
fixer1234
19.7k145083
19.7k145083
answered Apr 17 '10 at 13:07
user34496
add a comment |
add a comment |
protected by Community♦ Jun 22 '11 at 11:12
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Could you post a screenshot or anything to further explain what you're trying to resize and where you're watching it in?
– Ivo Flipse♦
Apr 5 '10 at 12:51