Convert Logo to PDF
A print-ready logo PDF starts with a vector source. Raster logos (PNG, JPG) should be vectorized before PDF export to ensure the logo scales perfectly at any size without pixelation or blur.
About Convert logo to PDF
Print suppliers, packaging manufacturers, and signage companies almost always request logo files in vector PDF format. A vector PDF contains path data rather than pixels, so the logo prints crisply at any size — from a 10mm business card imprint to a 5-metre billboard.
If you only have a raster logo (PNG or JPG), you need to vectorize it before creating the PDF. Upload your logo to the Logo Vectorizer, which traces the raster image into clean SVG paths. Download the SVG, open it in Illustrator or Inkscape, and export as PDF. The result is a production-quality vector PDF.
Key settings for a print-ready logo PDF: use CMYK colour mode if the file is destined for offset printing. RGB is acceptable for digital and screen printing. Embed all fonts. Set bleed to 3mm if the logo extends to the edge of a printed piece.
For web use, PDF is not ideal — use SVG, PNG, or WebP instead. PDF logos are specifically for print production contexts: letterheads, business cards, packaging proofs, and brand style guides.
Most brand guidelines require logos to be supplied in at minimum: AI or EPS (native vector), SVG (web vector), PDF (universal print), and PNG (raster preview). If you are building a logo package, the SVG from the vectorizer forms the basis for all of these exports.