This gives you the ability to work with each page on an individual basis. You can also see how large each page is by comparing file sizes. You can edit and compress each page efficiently prior to putting them together in a single pdf file. Even if you work in Adobe Acrobat, you don't know the size of individual pages. So, if you want to identify large pages and optimize them, you can use this procedure and replace the pages when you are finished.
pdftk input.pdf burst
pdf2ps input.pdf output.ps or pdf2ps -dLanguageLevel=1 input.pdf output.ps
(force zip/flate image compression) ps2pdf -dAutoFilterColorImages=false -dColorImageFilter=/FlateEncode input.ps output.pdf or (force jpeg compression) ps2pdf -dAutoFilterColorImages=false -dColorImageFilter=/DCTEncode input.ps output.pdf
gs -dNOPAUSE -sDEVICE=pdfwrite -dAutoFilterColorImages=false -dColorImageFilter=/FlateEncode -dAutoFilterGrayImages=false -dGrayImageFilter=/FlateEncode -sOutputFile=output.pdf input.ps -c quit
The ghostscript defaults -dAutoFilterColorImages=true and -dAutoFilterGrayImages=true cause ghostscript to automatically detect whether JPEG or Flate compression is most suitable for each image. JPEG is good for photo images. Flate is good for line drawings, cartoons and computer screen shots.
The compression can be forced to JPEG with
-dAutoFilterColorImages=false -dColorImageFilter=/DCTEncode
Other filters are /FlateEncode (zlib/gzip/pkzip) and /CCITTFaxEncode (ITU-T group 3 fax suitable for monochrome images).
To get smaller file sizes, enable image downsampling.
-dDownsampleColorImages=true -dColorImageDownsampleType=/Average -dColorImageDownsampleThreshold=1.5 -dColorImageResolution=72
This says that if the image resolution is greater than 72*1.5=108dpi, it should be resampled to 72dpi by averaging the pixels. There are similar settings for Gray and Mono images.
Using -dPDFSETTINGS=/screen will set color and gray image downsampling to 72dpi, -dPDFSETTINGS=/ebook will downsample to 150dpi, and -dPDFSETTINGS=/printer will downsample to 300dpi.
This process failed to work for me on a particular document when text was over an underlying image (the file was very large as a result). I was able to get everything to work if I opened the pdf file in Adobe Illustrator, then saved it as a PDF, and used this new PDF for the PDF → PS → PDF conversion process. The options I have tested to fix the problems are:
It should also be noted that resaving the file (even using optimization) in Acrobat 6 did not make a usable pdf file. The best indicator I can think of for this problem is to watch for unusually large Postscript files, when compared to others in the same file.
You can export all images from a PDF file using the Advanced → Export All Images… function in Adobe Acrobat 6