A red and white logo features a check mark inside a square on the left, with the text "mobisystems" in lowercase red font to the right.
art direction image

Meet MobiPDF – formerly PDF Extra

Learn More

Compressing PDFs - Using image DPI compression

A curved, metallic blade rests horizontally against a plain, light gray background.

When to use image DPI compression

So, why is there a second image compression slider? To answer this, we first need to explain what DPI means when it comes to images.

What is image DPI?

“DPI” stands for “Dots Per Inch” and it's a measure used to describe the resolution of an image, especially when printed. Here's a simple way to understand it:

  • Imagine you have a dot-to-dot picture. If there are only a few dots spread out (low DPI), your picture might look blocky or blurry because there's not a lot of detail.

  • If you have lots of dots very close together (high DPI), your picture will have lots of detail and therefore look much clearer and sharper.

When to use DPI compression?

A higher DPI means more dots per inch and therefore better image quality. This makes DPI especially important in the printing industry, where you want your image to look good regardless of what it’s being used for – from simple flyers to giant billboards.

MobiPDF allows you to preserve your images in the 72 to 300 DPI range, with 72 being web-friendly and 300 being printer-friendly.

art direction image

Time to test out this compression method as well. Here’s the original document again for reference.

art direction image

Now, let’s say you want to compress the file and upload it to the web. For this, you opt to leave the default DPI compression settings of 72 DPI. Once you confirm your choice with the “Apply” button, you end up with the following size reduction:

art direction image

As it turns out, the original file has been pretty much optimized for web use, which is why so little reduction (4.45%) took place! And here’s the virtually unchanged end result for comparison:

art direction image

So, there you have it – hopefully, these tips will give you enough confidence to improve your document workflow by experimenting with PDF compression yourself!