Extract Photos From a PDF Brochure or Catalog

Last updated: February 23, 2026

A PDF brochure, catalog, or report contains photos you need — product shots for a website, diagrams for a presentation, or logos for design work. Screenshotting them gives you low resolution with unwanted borders. OneClickPDF extracts the actual embedded images at their original resolution, so you get exactly what was placed in the document.

The Problem

You need individual image files from a PDF — product photos from a catalog, charts from a report, or diagrams from a manual. Copying and pasting doesn't work for embedded images, and screenshots lose quality. You need the original embedded images at full resolution.

How It Works

1

Open the Extract Images tool

Go to OneClickPDF's Extract Images tool.

2

Upload the PDF

Drop the brochure, catalog, or report. The tool scans every page for embedded raster images.

3

Choose PNG or JPG format

Select PNG for lossless quality (best for logos, diagrams, and graphics with text) or JPG for smaller file sizes (good for photos).

4

Preview and download

A grid displays every extracted image with its dimensions and size. Download individual images you need, or grab everything in a single ZIP file.

Extract Images

Pull all embedded images out of a PDF as individual files.

Try It Free

Frequently Asked Questions

Will I get the original image quality?
Yes. The tool extracts images at their embedded resolution — exactly as they were placed in the PDF. There's no re-compression or quality loss.
Why do some images look like full pages?
Some PDFs (especially scanned documents) store each page as a single image. In these cases, the tool extracts the full-page scan. For page-by-page export, try the PDF to PNG tool instead.
Can I extract vector graphics like logos?
The tool extracts raster (bitmap) images. Vector graphics drawn with PDF operators aren't extractable as separate files. For those, try the PDF to PNG tool to render the full page, then crop.
Are very small images filtered out?
Yes. Images under 100 bytes (like 1×1 tracking pixels) are automatically skipped. This keeps the results clean and focused on actual content images.

No more screenshots or manual cropping. Get every embedded image from any PDF at its original resolution — perfect for reusing product photos, diagrams, and graphics in your own projects.

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