PDF-Best Practice v3 CC-By
PDF-Best Practice v3 CC-By
PDF-Best Practice v3 CC-By
Deep Blue
deepblue.lib.umich.edu
2006-05-05
http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/58005
Use Words Styles (found in the Home tab, or via the Format menu on the Mac) to identify
headers, paragraphs, lists, and other structural elements. Create your own styles to add special
formatting, rather than simply using the formatting toolbar to e.g. change fonts or italicize blocks
of text.
Include alternative text for all images and links, and place labels (such as Figure 1.) near the
images they refer to. You can do this in either Word or Acrobat when using Windows, and in
Acrobat using a Macintosh.
If you use a multi-columned layout, use the Format > Columns feature in Word. Do not create
virtual columns using tabs, spaces, or tables.
Create tables using either Words Insert > Table feature to create a proper table. Do not nest
data tables by putting one table inside another. Use a distinctive cell for each data entry.
If your document includes images, use the following resolutions.
o Color and grayscale: 400 pixels per inch minimum, JPEG compression w/Maximum
image quality.
o Monochrome: 600 pixels per inch, CCITT Group 4 compression or ZIP.
Place any header and footer information (e.g., page numbers, notes, citations) in header and
footer windows/areas rather than manually inserting them at the top or bottom of each page.
For long documents, include a table of contents or other document guides with in-document
links (bookmarks or anchors) that jump to specific sections of the text.
For file names:
o Use ASCII letters (a-z, A-Z), digits (0-9), underscores and hyphens (_ and -).
o Do not use spaces, quotation marks, diacritic marks or other special/non-printing
characters.
o Reserve the period (., full stop) for the file extension at the end of the filename.
For more details on creating accessible and usable documents, consult the tutorials available at
<http://wac.osu.edu>, from which portions of these recommendations have been adapted. You can also
consult the Librarys Knowledge Navigation Center <http://www.lib.umich.edu/knc/> for help setting up
your documents. Adobe also provides detailed guidelines for usability accessibility at
<http://www.adobe.com/accessibility/>.
2. A new window will appear, as shown below. In Settings, select PDF/A-1b:2005 (RGB) from
the Conversion Settings menu, check PDF/A-1a:2005 compliant file and make sure Create
Bookmarks, Add Links, and Enable Accessibility and Reflow with tagged Adobe PDF are
all selected.
3. To create a PDF from a finished document, under the Acrobat menu select Create PDF. You
will be prompted to save the PDF file, as shown. Name the document, and then click on
Options
4. Here, you can assure youre creating bookmarks and structure tags, and that the PDF is in fact
PDF/A compliant. When youve made the selections, click on OK and then finish saving the
document.
3. Click the Analyze and fix button and you will create a well-formed PDF/A when you save
the file. We recommend appending _A to your file name, just before the .pdf extension.
4. You can also click on PDF fixups and select Embed fonts and then Analyze and fix to
confirm that your fonts embedded properly.
Open your document in Acrobat Professional, and choose File > Properties to determine
whether the document has tags (Tagged PDF: Yes/No); those created using Microsoft Word
on a Macintosh may not. If not, under the View > Tools > Accessibility menu, choose Full
Check. This will highlight any problems in the document, and guide you in creating tags,
alternative text for images, specifying a language, and enhancing the document in other ways.
You can also add bookmarks to further aid in navigation. These dont fully substitute for tags,
or for structuring the document so that theres a clear, logical reading order. But they will assist
all readers in getting to the information they want and need faster.
Finally, returning to File > Properties, if youre using security settings to restrict copying,
before applying them make sure that the Enable Text Access for Screen Reader Devices for the
Visually Impaired option is checked.
All materials should be scanned at 100% scale to the dimensions of the original.
Pages containing text and/or line art should be monochrome (black and white), 600dpi (or
300dpi for oversized materials greater than 11x16 in/28x41 cm), and be compressed using ITU
Group IV compression.
Pages containing photographs and/or illustrations should be 24-bit color using the sRGB color
space or 8-bit grayscale, 400dpi (or 300dpi for oversized materials greater than 11x16 in/28x41
cm), and be compressed with JPEG compression using the highest quality setting.
Missing or blank pages should be represented as blank images of the same size as the original.
The PDF file should be optimized and should be in (Searchable Image (Exact)/Image+Text)
format.
If your process creates intermediate files (TIFF, PostScript, etc.), it must not change the
resolution of the original scans (down sampling) or use lossy compression such as JPEG. (These
methods, although they do reduce file size, will cause irreversible quality loss.) TIFF is an
excellent choice for an intermediate file format, and acceptable compression schemes (which can
all be used in combination with TIFF) are ITU Group 4 (for black and white material only),
LZW, and Flate (Zip).
If possible, embed OCR (optical character recognition) generated text in the document.
The PDF should have tags and bookmarks as described elsewhere in this document.
To create PDF files by scanning print material: Using Adobe Acrobat Professional
Adobe Acrobat Professional has built-in scanning capabilities that can be used to create PDF files using
printed materials. Note that Acrobat Professional is not the same as Acrobat Reader or Acrobat Standard; only
Acrobat Professional has support for scanning. Use the following steps to create PDF files using a scanner
with Adobe Acrobat Professional. These steps apply to both Windows and Macintosh, with only slight
variations in appearance:
1. From the File menu, select Create > PDF from Scanner. Select your scanner device, choose
Front Sides or Both Sides as appropriate, select Recognize Text Using OCR, and select Add
Tags To Document.
2. Click Image Settings. A new window will appear. In this window, change the settings as
shown.
3. Click Scan.
Questions?
If you have any questions, please contact us at deepblue@umich.edu and we will be happy to help you
if we can.