Twenty receipt photos, ten product shots, a dozen scanned pages. All JPGs. You need them as one PDF for an expense claim, a portfolio, or a record-keeping pack.
One drag does it
Drag all the JPGs into Flint's Image to PDF converter. Each image becomes a page in the PDF, in the order you dropped them. Download the PDF and you're done.
For more control, drag images one at a time in the order you want them. The converter respects the drop order.
Reordering after upload
If the order ended up wrong, drag the thumbnails in the converter's preview to rearrange. Or upload the images in a renamed order — many file managers will sort files alphabetically, so naming them `01-receipt.jpg`, `02-receipt.jpg` and so on ensures the right sequence.
For 50+ images, batch-renaming first is the cleanest path.
Page size and orientation
Each PDF page sizes to match the JPG's aspect ratio by default. Portrait photos give you portrait pages; landscape photos give you landscape pages. For uniform page sizes (e.g. all A4), the converter pads or scales each image.
For mixed orientations, padding can leave white space on some pages. Consider merging the resulting PDFs from same-orientation batches if uniformity matters.
Quality and file size
Original JPG quality is preserved — no recompression by default. For very large image sets, the resulting PDF can be substantial. Compress the PDF afterwards if you need to email or upload it.
FAQ
Is there a limit on number of images?
Generous limits — handles dozens of images easily. Hundreds at once may benefit from breaking into smaller batches.
Can I mix JPG and PNG?
Yes — the converter accepts both. Mix freely in one batch.
Will the PDF be searchable?
Not by default — images don't contain text. Run OCR on the resulting PDF if you need searchable text.
How do I make sure the order is right?
Rename files with numeric prefixes (01-, 02-, etc.) before uploading. Or reorder via the converter's preview.
Many images, one document. Convert your JPGs to PDF in one drop.