TinyWebTools

TinyWebTools

Simple tools that run locally in your browser.

Tool

WEBP to PDF for email (multiple images)

Convert WEBP images to PDF for email. Runs locally — no uploads.

Runs locally • No upload

WEBP to PDF

Convert WEBP to PDF locally in your browser. Nothing is uploaded.

Drop WEBP image(s) here
or
Free: 1 image • Pro: multiple images → one PDF
Quality 0.85
Max width (optional) px
✨ Get Pro
Pro: No ads · Multiple WEBPs → one multi-page PDF

FAQ

Is this safe and private?

Yes. Your WEBP files stay on your device. The conversion runs locally in your browser and nothing is uploaded.

Why convert WEBP to PDF?

Many platforms accept PDF but not WEBP. PDF is widely compatible for email, forms, printing, and client delivery.

How to convert WEBP to PDF for email

  • 1) Select your WEBP file(s) (stay on your device).
  • 2) Optional: set a max width if you want smaller PDFs.
  • 3) Click Convert & Download.
  • 4) For multi-page PDFs from multiple images, use Pro.
  • 5) Open the PDF and verify page order and readability.

How-to

This guide helps you send WEBP as a PDF attachment for email — multiple images.

Many apps and upload forms accept PDF but reject WEBP. Converting WEBP to PDF solves compatibility problems while keeping your workflow simple. The conversion runs locally in your browser, so files are not uploaded.

If you want smaller attachments (especially for email), reduce the image dimensions before embedding into the PDF. A max width like 1600px is often enough for viewing and keeps file sizes under control.

For WordPress/CMS workflows: PDFs are sometimes easier to share with clients or reviewers. You can bundle several images into one PDF proof so there’s only one file to download and comment on.

Page order tip: the PDF pages follow the selection order. Rename files with numbers (001.webp, 002.webp, …) before selecting to avoid mistakes.

Best practice: convert one file first to check quality, then convert the full set. If you see blurry edges, avoid resizing too aggressively.

Common mistakes

  • Assuming PDF will always be smaller (if images are huge, PDF can be big too).
  • Forgetting to control page order for multi-page PDFs.
  • Resizing too small, causing text/edges to look soft.
  • Trying to convert non-WEBP files (ensure .webp).

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