PDFs often contain high-quality images — photos, charts, diagrams, logos — that you need as separate files. Instead of taking screenshots (which reduces quality), use an image extractor to get the original embedded images at full resolution.
Why Extract Instead of Screenshot?
Screenshots capture images at screen resolution (typically 72-96 DPI), which is much lower than the original. Extracting gives you the actual embedded image at its original resolution, which could be 300 DPI or higher.
Extracted images also maintain their original format (JPEG, PNG, TIFF) and color profile, making them suitable for print and professional use.
Extract with PDF Alone
Upload your PDF to PDF Alone's Extract Images tool. The tool scans every page, identifies all embedded images, and packages them as a downloadable ZIP file. Each image is saved in its original format and resolution.
This works with any PDF — reports, presentations, portfolios, catalogs, and more. The extraction process does not modify the original PDF.
What You Can Extract
Photos and illustrations embedded in the document. Company logos and brand graphics. Charts and graphs (as raster images). Background images and decorative elements.
Note that text rendered as PDF text (not an image of text) cannot be extracted as an image. For that, use PDF to PNG conversion which renders entire pages as images.