A5 Landscape (2480×1748 px) Image Resizer

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Resize images to A5 Landscape size (2480×1748 px)

The A5 landscape size at 2480×1748 pixels is commonly used for compact horizontal print layouts, postcards, invitation cards, menu cards, small certificates, product inserts, and landscape PDF pages. It gives you the smaller footprint of A5 while providing a wide layout that works well for card-style designs.

Resizing an image to A5 landscape helps you create visuals that feel print-ready, compact, and horizontally balanced, especially when your design needs more width than height but does not require a full A4 page.

This tool allows you to resize images to exact 2480×1748 px dimensions while preserving composition and visual quality.

Everything runs locally in your browser, so your images stay private and processing remains fast.


Why 2480×1748 is used for A5 landscape images

A5 landscape is the horizontal version of A5. At a high-resolution print scale, it is commonly represented as 2480×1748 px.

This size works because it:

  • follows the A5 paper shape in landscape orientation
  • provides enough resolution for sharp printed output
  • creates a compact alternative to A4 landscape
  • works well for postcards, cards, and small certificates
  • supports wide booklet and PDF page layouts

It is commonly used for:

  • postcards
  • invitation cards
  • thank-you cards
  • menu cards
  • product inserts
  • compact certificates
  • landscape booklet pages
  • PDF handouts

What this A5 landscape image resizer does

This tool resizes images into an exact 2480×1748 A5 landscape frame using cover mode, ensuring the image fills the full page without distortion.

You can:

  • Drag & drop images into the tool
  • Paste images directly from your clipboard
  • Automatically fit images into an A5 landscape canvas
  • Preserve aspect ratio while filling the frame
  • Resize multiple images at once
  • Download individually or export as a ZIP

The preview updates instantly so you can confirm the page framing before exporting.


How to resize an image to A5 landscape size

1. Upload your image

Add your image by dragging it into the tool, selecting it manually, or pasting it from your clipboard.

Supported formats:

  • JPEG
  • PNG
  • WebP

2. Automatic cover resizing

The tool applies a cover fit automatically.

This means:

  • the image fills the full 2480×1748 A5 landscape frame
  • aspect ratio is preserved
  • the image is not stretched
  • edges may be cropped if the source ratio is different

This creates a clean A5 landscape image without distortion.

3. Export your resized image

Download the resized image instantly or export multiple images together as a ZIP file.


Safe area for A5 landscape print layouts

A5 landscape designs are smaller than A4 landscape, so spacing and readability matter. Text, logos, and important details can feel cramped if they sit too close to the edges.

To avoid cutting off important content:

  • keep text, logos, and key details away from the outer edges
  • leave margin space around the design
  • avoid placing essential content in the corners
  • keep typography large enough for print
  • preview the final crop before downloading

If the image will be printed, leaving a safe margin is important because printers and PDF workflows may trim, scale, or shift the page slightly.


Common uses for A5 landscape images

Postcards and announcement cards

A5 landscape is a strong format for card-style print designs.

Use 2480×1748 for:

  • postcards
  • save-the-date cards
  • announcement cards
  • thank-you cards
  • promotional cards
  • event cards

Invitations

Landscape invitations feel wide, elegant, and easy to balance visually.

This size works well for:

  • wedding invitations
  • party invitations
  • business event invitations
  • hotel event cards
  • holiday cards

A5 landscape is useful for compact menus, cafe cards, and simple price lists.

It gives enough horizontal space for:

  • columns
  • item groups
  • prices
  • small photos
  • decorative headings

Small certificates and awards

A5 landscape can work well for compact certificates where A4 feels too large.

Use it for:

  • participation certificates
  • completion cards
  • mini awards
  • recognition notes
  • workshop certificates

Product inserts and handouts

A5 landscape is practical for printed material that goes inside packages, folders, rooms, or welcome packs.

Examples include:

  • product inserts
  • care cards
  • instruction cards
  • hotel information cards
  • compact PDF handouts

A5 landscape vs A5 portrait

  • A5 landscape: 2480×1748 px
  • A5 portrait: 1748×2480 px

Use A5 landscape when your design is horizontal, card-like, certificate-style, menu-style, or wide-format.

Use A5 portrait when your design is vertical, flyer-like, booklet-style, invitation-style, or document-like.


A5 landscape vs A4 landscape

  • A4 landscape: 3508×2480 px
  • A5 landscape: 2480×1748 px

Use A4 landscape when you need a larger printable page with more room for details, charts, tables, or full-size handouts.

Use A5 landscape when you need a smaller, compact horizontal print layout that is easier to distribute or include as an insert.


A5 landscape vs 16:9 slides

A5 landscape and 16:9 slides are both horizontal, but they are not the same shape.

  • A5 landscape: print/document ratio
  • 16:9 slides: screen/presentation ratio

Use A5 landscape when the final output is meant for printing, PDF pages, cards, menus, or inserts.

Use 16:9 when the final output is meant for screens, presentations, videos, or widescreen displays.


Composition tips for A5 landscape images

Keep the layout focused

A5 landscape is compact, so avoid trying to fit too much information into one design.

Focus on:

  • one strong headline
  • one main visual
  • clear spacing
  • simple structure
  • readable text

Use horizontal balance

The landscape shape gives you room to arrange elements from left to right.

Good layouts often use:

  • image on one side, text on the other
  • centered title with supporting details below
  • two-column card layouts
  • wide background photography
  • balanced logo and CTA placement

Leave print margins

Printed cards and small handouts need breathing room.

Keep important text, logos, and design elements away from the edges so they do not feel cramped or risk being trimmed.

Use readable typography

Because A5 is smaller than A4, text must be clear.

Use larger type, strong contrast, and avoid long paragraphs unless the design is meant to be read closely.


Why your A5 landscape image might look wrong

Common issues include:

  • the source image is too small
  • the image has the wrong aspect ratio
  • important content is too close to the edges
  • text becomes too small after resizing
  • the layout feels crowded
  • the image looks blurry when printed
  • the design was made for screen use instead of print use

Using a high-resolution source image, simple layout, and safe margins solves most A5 landscape resizing problems.


Best source images for A5 landscape resizing

For the cleanest A5 landscape result, start with images that are already large, horizontal, or card-friendly.

Good source images include:

  • postcard designs
  • invitation graphics
  • wide photos
  • menu card layouts
  • certificate designs
  • product insert artwork
  • landscape PDF pages
  • presentation-style images

Vertical images can still be resized to A5 landscape, but they may require heavy cropping to fill the horizontal page.


File format tips for A5 landscape images

Different file formats work better for different A5 landscape use cases.

Use JPEG for photos

JPEG is usually best for:

  • photo cards
  • invitations
  • postcards
  • menu images
  • smaller file sizes

Use PNG for graphics

PNG is better for:

  • sharp text
  • logos
  • flat graphics
  • transparency
  • screenshots
  • document-style designs

Use WebP for web use

WebP is useful when you want a smaller A5 landscape image for online previews, downloads, or web-based document assets.


Privacy-first A5 landscape resizing

Your images are processed locally in your browser.

That means:

  • no image uploads
  • no server-side processing
  • no account required
  • no waiting for cloud conversion
  • private resizing on your device

This is useful when working with private invitations, client cards, unpublished menus, product inserts, compact certificates, or internal PDF materials.


Resize A5 landscape images in batches

If you need multiple images converted to A5 landscape size, you can resize them together instead of processing one by one.

Batch resizing is useful for:

  • invitation card sets
  • postcard batches
  • menu card collections
  • product inserts
  • compact certificates
  • PDF handouts
  • event materials

Upload multiple images, preview the results, and export everything together as a ZIP.


Final tips for A5 landscape images

Use A5 landscape at 2480×1748 px when you want an image that feels print-ready, compact, horizontal, and easy to distribute.

For best results:

  • start with a high-resolution source image
  • choose horizontal images when possible
  • keep the layout simple
  • use readable text
  • leave safe margins
  • preview the crop before exporting
  • compress the final image if it will be shared online

This helps you create clean A5 landscape images for postcards, invitations, menu cards, product inserts, compact certificates, PDF handouts, and small horizontal print layouts.

Frequently Asked Questions

A5 landscape at 300 DPI is commonly represented as 2480×1748 pixels. It is the horizontal version of A5 and is useful for postcards, invitation cards, menu cards, compact certificates, and landscape PDF pages.

Yes. 2480×1748 px is a common high-resolution A5 landscape size for 300 DPI-style printing. It provides enough detail for sharp printed output when the source image is high quality.

A5 landscape uses 2480×1748 px, making it wider than it is tall. A5 portrait uses 1748×2480 px, making it taller than it is wide.

This tool uses cover resizing so the full 2480×1748 frame is filled without stretching. If your source image uses a different aspect ratio, some edges may be cropped. Keeping important content away from the edges helps protect the layout.

No. All processing happens locally in your browser, so your images remain private on your device.

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