for the input and the resulting JPG.ĮDIT: (I had wanted to give this hint already in my original answer, but forgot.) montage by default will use tile sizes of 120x120 pixels. Of course, montage has many dozen of additional parameters which allow you to determine background, spacing, offsets, decoration, labels, rotation, cropping, caption etc. You could use this command to stitch together 12 individual JPGs into one: montage ^ tile 4x3 you'd get this imposition layout: 1 2 3 4 The montage command (used in this example is ImageMagick) allows you to control the tiling pattern. Multiple-to-single-JPG-stitching with montage (ImageMagick or GraphicsMagick): You may need to additionally control the pagesize of the resulting JPGs in case your Ghostscript's default doesn't fit your needs: gswin32c.exe ^ The parameter *-dJPEGQ=95" sets "JPEG Quality" to 95%. This will create JPGs called pdffile-001.jpeg, pdffile-002.jpg etc. sOutputFile=c:/path/to/jpeg-dir/pdffile-%03d.jpeg ^ So make sure you tweak the commandline options so they work for you. You'll want to make sure that you get the best possible result. PDF-to-JPG conversion (with Ghostscript): I'm not aware of any software which can do that in one go. Then stitch together the resulting JPG files using another program ( ImageMagick or GraphicsMagic can do that using their montage sub-commands). Yes, you'll have to convert each PDF page into a single JPG file (Ghostscript can do that).
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