Bind a set of JPGs — receipts, scanned pages, a photo portfolio — into a single PDF that is easy to email, archive, and print. Each image becomes one page, in the order you add it. PNG inputs are welcome too, with transparency flattened onto a clean white page.
Why a PDF beats a folder of loose images
When you need to send several pictures as one coherent document — a stack of receipts, a multi-page scan, a small portfolio, or a signed form — a PDF beats emailing a pile of separate JPGs. A single file keeps the pages in order, prints predictably with consistent margins, and opens the same way on every device without anyone hunting through attachments. PDF is also the format institutions expect for paperwork: expense systems, schools, and government portals almost always ask for it. This tool turns each image into one page, in the exact order you add them, so the document reads top to bottom just as you intended. PNG inputs are welcome alongside JPG, with any transparency flattened onto a clean white page so nothing prints as an odd grey box.
Prepping images for a tidy, lightweight PDF
A little preparation makes the finished PDF smaller and neater. Enormous camera images bloat the document and slow it to open, so scaling them down first with the JPG resizer keeps the file lean without hurting on-screen or print clarity. If your source pictures are HEIC, WebP, or other formats, normalise them through Convert to JPG so every page encodes consistently. Heavy photos can also be trimmed with the JPG compressor before binding. A few seconds of tidy-up means a PDF that emails easily and prints cleanly. The jpgoo hub keeps each of these steps a click apart, so building a polished document never means juggling separate apps.