I just dont get why, apparently, it is too hard for adobe to make a decent software that would do the simplest tasks.
Not tif g4 any more, more like bad jpg pdf aus postscript.png (61 KiB) Viewed 8523 times look at the weird crosses tif aus ghostscript.png (35.47 KiB) Viewed 8523 times they look really good, but not tiff g4, so not good for me.ĭoes anyone here have an idea as to how i could create a simple pdf with one pagesize for the whole document without any quality loss? I tried copping the images in adobe professional and then saving it (after importing the raw tiffs from the scan in to adobe acrobat), however, the resulting pdf is 1,5 times the size as the original files, and the images again are not purely black and white. In other cases it is actually black and white, however there are many many white crosses embedded into black areas (screenshot attached) (tif 600 dpi export). in some cases it's not b&w any more, it looks more like a terrible jpg compressed image (pdf export). Now under windows 7 when i hit print, the adjustments for each page take seemingly forever, also when the output is handed to freepdfxp the resulting pdfs are just very very bad. those pdfs were clean, all the same page size (A4) and most important: the same size as the output images. My problem is the following: 5 or so years ago when i was still using windows xp - i would just select all the tiff files hit print and it would create a pdf through a ghostscript printer extremely fast (freepdfXP). I scanned a very very nice score (surprise ) and put a lot of effort in cleaning out the pages and cropping the pages to the exact boundries of the printed stuff on the page (page number in the upper left/right corner, as well as plate number on bottom -> page size is roughly the same, for every crop).