File size on export

I need to know the file size that will be generated when exporting jpegs for web use, as certain sites have restrictions. This is a fairly basic function and is available in Elements.
I currently have to guess a quality setting, export the jpeg, check the file size in Explorer, re-export from LR (reducing quality/pixel limits if the file size is too big) and continue the iterations until I achieve an acceptable size.
This facility should be available for all export file-type options.

I agree, but I think this has to go beyond the file size.
The problem is that if you are exporting more than one jpeg, even with the same number of pixels and quality, the file sizes will be different due to compression.
To make this work, it'd be nice to be able to set a Maximum File Size to Export. Then perhaps a Radio Button to choose between adjusting the size in pixels or adjusting the quality to fit as needed.
Paul Wasserman

Similar Messages

  • Maximum file size for export into MP4?

    Hello,
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    Thank you
    jiri

    You are right.
    So I am running AP Pro 5.0.4, Adobe Media Encoder 5.0.1.0 (64bit). Operating system Mac OS X ver 10.7.3. All applications are up to date.
    MacBook Pro Intel i5 2.53GB, 8GB RAM, nVidia GT 330M 256 MB, 500GB HDD
    Video is 1920x1080 (AVCHD) 25fps in a .MTS container  (major part of timeline), 1280x720 30fps in .MOV container (2mins), Still images 4000x3000 in .JPG
    No error message is generated during export - everything finishes without any problem...just file created has 0 byte size (as described above).
    This is my largest video project (1h 54min) I dont have any other problem with other projects.
    I dont run any other special software, at the moment of export all usual applications are closed so that MacBook "power" can go to Media Encoder. No codecs installed, using VLC Player or Quick Time.
    Attached please find printscreen from Export settings (AP Pro). Writing this ppost I tried to export only the first 4mins from timeline where all kind of media is used...and it was OK.
    As a next step I will try to export (same settings) 1h 30mins as I still believe problem comes with length of video exported.
    Let me know your opinion

  • File Size when Exporting to PDF

    Hi!
    I have a script that exports InDesign documents to PDF, but when I export it, the file size is too big.  The document is a product brochure so there are a lot of images.  Is there any way that I can make the file size smaller besides the Image Compression in Adobe PDF Preset?  I plan on creating a custom preset.  I tried the [Smallest File Size] preset but the quality of the images is not good.
    Thanks!

    It's unrelated to the script you are using.
    This has been discussed over and over in the general forum, but it boils down to:
    If you have lots of images, there is no way you can have a small file AND good image quality. One of them has to suffer.
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    See also
    http://forums.adobe.com/message/2598022#2598022
    http://forums.adobe.com/message/1290421
    http://forums.adobe.com/message/2794972
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  • Question about reducing PDF file size on export

    I have a large file that is generates a PDF about 75MB when exported with the "[High Quality Print]" preset. However, I can reduce the size down to to under 5MG in Acrobat if I use the Tools>Flattener Preview>[Medium Resolution] setting (image attached). Is there a way to generate this smaller file directly from InDesign? I couldn't figure out how to do this with InDesign's Flattener Preview or Export options, but it is very likely that I missed something.

    Eugene Tyson wrote:
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    That should get you a nice small file size, I believe.
    Flattening transparency in InDesign will not necessarily yield a smaller PDF file size. Transparency flattening will not automatically convert placed vector artwork to raster images unless that vector artwork is actually involved with transparency. And even then, whether you end up with a smaller file depends on a number of factors.
    If the reason for the very large file size is indeed very complex vector artwork and you are willing to sacrifice quality, conversion of such vector artwork to raster might yield a significantly smaller exported PDF file. To accomplish that conversion, I would personally suggest converting the most offensive (in terms of file size and complexity) of such files in Illustrator (assuming that they were .AI files) and exporting them as .TIF files (to avoid the potential imaging artifacts of JPEG compression).
              - Dov

  • Having trouble reducing PDF file size on export

    Hi, I recently switched from Quark to InDesign and am having trouble figuring out how to reduce the size of a PDF on export.
    The file has about 200 pages with about 300 EPS files, which are approximately 30-40K each. The file uses fewer than 10 fonts, all from two font families (Bembo Std and Univers Std). When I created a similar file in Quark, the exported PDF is ~5MG. However, when I export the file I created in InDesign, the PDF is 10xs larger (~50MG). I tried exporting using the High Quality Print and Smallest File Size settings, but the result was the same. (I think that is because there are no JPG images to compress, just vector files which are already tiny.)
    If you have any suggestions for other settings to check, I would be grateful for the help. Overall, other than this issue, I have been extremely happy with InDesign.
    I am using CS5, v 7.0.4 on Mac OS X (10.6.8, Snow Leopard)
    Thank you,
    SH

    Quark to the best of my knowledge still goes the Postscript to PDF route - I'm not 100% sure on that.
    But here's why Export is differetn than how you print to Postscript and distill http://indesignsecrets.com/creating-pdf-export-or-use-distiller.php
    Distilling is very much frowned upon, and Export from InDesign is considered the best workflow.And the file size is larger, but it does add a lot of important information to the PDF, which makes it superior than distilling.
    But, there's a lot of document overhead in PDFs.
    The High Quality setting is only meant as a guide.  It's not meant to be used, in my opinion, out of the box.
    This explains why and how to counter it.
    http://indesignsecrets.com/document-overhead-in-indesigns-pdf-can-be-huuuuuuge.php
    The Help files do give some clues
    http://help.adobe.com/en_US/InDesign/6.0/WSa285fff53dea4f8617383751001ea8cb3f-70b3a.html
    This PDF guide is MUST http://www.adobe.com/designcenter/cs3/articles/cs3_printguide.html
    And besides that EPS files are considered legacy files by Adobe, I'm not sure how they're handled on PDF export. But you'd be better off saving to .ai from illustrator from now on.
    http://www.prepressure.com/library/file-formats/eps
    Instead of EPS from photoshop - save as TIFF or PSD if all Raster. If it's raster + vector text layers, shapes or masks then save to PDF.
    http://indesignsecrets.com/preserving-vectors-in-photoshop-files.php

  • Why is file size of exported clip so large?

    I have a movie clip in MPEG-4 format, 3 minutes in duration, 720x400. I ripped it (using Handbrake) from a DVD I own. Let's call this clip Clip A. I wanted it to be smaller, so I used Quicktime Pro 6.5.2 to export it. Let's call the exported clip Clip AE (E for exported). Clip AE has these properties:
    Compression: Sorenson Video 3
    Quality: High
    Frame rate: 15
    Width x Height: 310 x 200
    Sound format: QDesign Music 2
    Sample rate: 22,050 kHz
    Channels: Mono
    File Size: 5.5 MB
    Great. That's just what I wanted. Now I go to a second movie clip I have in MPEG-4 format. This Clip B is only 90 seconds in duration, 720x400. I export it to Clip BE. Clip BE has these properties:
    Compression: Sorenson Video 3
    Quality: High
    Frame rate: 15
    Width x Height: 310 x 200
    Sound format: QDesign Music 2
    Sample rate: 22,050 kHz
    Channels: Mono
    FILE SIZE: 25.8 MB
    In both exports I set the Key Frame Rate and Data Rate to automatic. So, everything is the same except Clip BE, which is half as long in duration as Clip AE, is 5 times larger in file size.
    I'm no expert at using QT Pro, but this result just does not make sense to me. Why is the second exported clip 5 times larger than the first one. I wanted to email both of them to my wife at work as a little surprise, but the second one is way too big for my email account. How can I get the file size of that second clip down to the size of the first one? Any help would be greatly appreciated.
    iMac G5, iBook (dual USB) G3   Mac OS X (10.3.9)  

    The second clip probably has more detail or motion than the first.
    Open Clip AE and choose "Get Info." Note the data rate of the video.
    Now export clip B again, but instead of setting the data rate to automatic, set it to the same number as Clip AE's data rate.
    You will lose video quality, but the file should come out smaller.

  • Reports - Image resolution : How to minimize file size of exported report?

    Our reports are currently using high quality images which makes the file size bigger. Is there any way to reduce the exported report's file size?
    Please provide us the way to use lower quality images in reports to minimize the file size.
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    Using an image program like Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro you need to reduce the number of colors and DPI while maintaining as much of the clarity as possible.
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    Open the image you want to change.
    Check the 'Count of Colors used' in the tool you're using.  If more than 256 (8 bit) you'll not be able to do much to reduce colors, but most likely the image has a palette of 17.6 million colors (24 bit)
    If a color image, try reducing to 8bit, 10bit or 12bit.  If a b&w change it to grey scale and reduce.  Some forms can be reduced to 16 (4 bit).
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    Save the image in BMP format with RLE compress if possible.  Look at it in the image tool to see if it has held up.
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  • Why are the file sizes of exported jpegs so small?

    I shoot raw, studio portraits mostly. I import to Lightroom 5 as DNG and then edit. Upon exporting as jpegs, the file sizes end up way too small, some of the cropped and/or black & white conversions as small as 560 KB, even with slider to 100%. Un-cropped color photos are ending up from 1.5 to 3MB. What am I doing wrong?

    Jim,
    Thank you for your response. I think some of the difficulties in this thread are that there have been more than one person reporting issues, which may or may not be exactly the same or different from the initial one reported by the original poster. Then, anyone else commenting can easily intermix bits and pieces from any or all of the other posters interrelated issues. Also, I should have added to my last response in clarification what I meant about the overall dimensions. I was referring specifically to inches, not file size, not resolution.
    My very first post was a thank you to Rusty's post for his comment about how he had noticed his Resolution setting had been changed from ppi to ppcm. I didn't say anything about printing. In fact, I never even stated what my issue was. I was merely thanking him for sharing information. So, for anyone to tell me that I didn't know what my issue is, that I didn't understand was quite laughable to me. And then the other two posters were almost equally ridiculous, who said that since they didn't experience the same conditions as myself and another person, it couldn't be a programming error.
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    I have a set process, I have set image sizes, I have an action recorded in Photoshop to shrink my images to 24" x 36" and save them in the proper folder with the proper name and another to shrink them to 8" x 12" and place them in the proper folder with the proper name. I am meticulous, so when the first image imported into Photoshop and it was 18.898" x 28.346", un-cropped, I couldn't figure it out. The file size was still just as large, the resolution was still 72, I hadn't changed any settings in Lightroom or Photoshop, the ONLY thing I had done was install an update. It didn't make sense to me that with the pixel dimensions still being the normal size, all of the sudden the inch dimensions were smaller. And I did need to be able to have the capability for a larger print size if/when I do want to print.
    I hope that I'm being clear now. I really was just trying to post a thank you initially. I hadn't expected all of this excess.
    I apologize for the troll statement. It wasn't meant for you directly, it was more for the grouping of comments which in my opinion didn't seem to be useful for the discussion and were instead just baiting. I shouldn't have allowed my bad mood to permeate my own comment regardless. I am also sorry for any other statements I made which might have come across wrong. I was trying to be funny with my first comment about programmers, but it might not have come across that way. I hadn't expected the rude and unnecessary comment back which I received, and that's where the trollish comments came from. That's why I only responded to that person once, despite the string of poking posts.

  • Huge file size when export

    Ok so i use Premiere CS3 and when I want to export my video (one single audio track and one image as 'video', total of 5 - 6 minutes) i get a file size of 1.26 GB (!). The imported files have a total size of lower than 10MB. What I do is i export -> movie and choose AVI format. I've tried PAL & NTSC but there is only a slight difference in file size. How is it possible that this exported movie is so big?

    when you choose avi format you will see something called " settings" ...when you open that up what do you have selected for your settings ??
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  • Large PDF file sizes when exporting from InDesign

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    > It's just strange though because our marketing department as an 80 page full color catalog that, when exported it is only 5MB. Their ID document uses many very large .tif files. So, I am leaning toward it being an .eps/.ai issue??
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    Pegasus Type, Inc.
    www.pegtype.com

  • Limiting the file size on Export Action

    Hi,
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  • Reducing file size for export - best results???

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    I take it you just want to get the songs onto DVD If you put all of them in one sequence (timeline) what is the total length?
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