Quick answer
The short version
Add the JPG images to JPG to PDF, arrange them in reading order, then choose page size, orientation, margins and fit behaviour. Combine them into one PDF and review every page for rotation, cropping and sequence. Use fit when preserving the whole image matters more than filling the page.
JPG to PDFStep-by-step
A reliable workflow
- 01
Rotate and crop the source images before uploading when needed.
- 02
Add the JPG files and arrange them in the intended page order.
- 03
Choose Auto, A4 or Letter, then set orientation and margins.
- 04
Choose Fit to preserve the entire image or Crop only when edge loss is acceptable.
- 05
Create the PDF and inspect every page before sharing it.
Choose page settings for the destination
Auto page size follows each image more closely. A4 and Letter produce consistent document pages and are easier to print, but aspect-ratio differences can create whitespace or cropping.
- Fit keeps the full image inside the available page area.
- Crop fills the page area and can remove content near the edges.
- Margins protect content from common printer non-printable areas.
Build a predictable sequence
Do not rely on camera filenames to define the final order. Use the visible Move controls, check page numbers in the preview list and remove duplicate captures before conversion.
If images mix portrait and landscape content, Auto orientation can be convenient. For a formal submission, consistent page orientation may be easier for the recipient to read and print.
Before you continue
Limitations
- The reviewed workflow accepts JPG and JPEG images, not every camera format.
- Crop mode can remove edge content and should be checked page by page.
- Converting images to PDF does not run OCR or make text editable.
Questions
Troubleshooting and common questions
Should I use A4 or Letter?
Use the size expected by the recipient or printer. Auto is useful when preserving each image shape is more important than uniform pages.
Why are white borders visible?
The image and page have different aspect ratios. Fit preserves the whole image and uses whitespace for the remaining area.