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Current page: How to compress PDF files in Figma using TinyImage - The video shows how to use the TinyImage plugin in Figma to compress PDF exports, both for individual frames and for multiple frames merged into a single PDF. It also demonstrates choosing PDF quality settings like 72dpi, 150dpi, and 300dpi, then comparing the resulting file sizes against Figma’s native exports.. Machine-readable page: /tinyimage/tutorials/how-to-compress-pdf-files-in-figma-using-tinyimage.md.

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How to compress PDF files in Figma using TinyImage

The video shows how to use the TinyImage plugin in Figma to compress PDF exports, both for individual frames and for multiple frames merged into a single PDF. It also demonstrates choosing PDF quality settings like 72dpi, 150dpi, and 300dpi, then comparing the resulting file sizes against Figma’s native exports.

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What this video covers

The video shows how to use the TinyImage plugin in Figma to compress PDF exports, both for individual frames and for multiple frames merged into a single PDF. It also demonstrates choosing PDF quality settings like 72dpi, 150dpi, and 300dpi, then comparing the resulting file sizes against Figma’s native exports.

Things you'll need

  • Figma
  • TinyImage plugin

Steps

  1. Install TinyImage from Figma Community if it is not already installed.
  2. Open your Figma file, then run TinyImage from right click > Plugins > TinyImage Compressor.
  3. Add PDF export settings to the frames you want in Figma’s right sidebar, then refresh TinyImage so it detects them.
  4. Choose a PDF quality setting such as 72dpi, 150dpi, or 300dpi, then click Compress to export compressed PDFs.
  5. For a single merged PDF, use TinyImage’s all frames to single PDF option and export the frames in the left sidebar order.
  6. If needed, reorder the pages by rearranging the frames in Figma’s layers panel before running TinyImage again.
  7. Open the saved zip file to access the compressed PDF exports and compare the reduced file sizes.

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