June 27, 2026
Doors at Seven, the Program Not Yet Posted
Six hours before a community choir concert, Greta needed to post a PDF to Facebook fast. Here's how she shared all 18 pages without a single screenshot.
1:40 PM. Six hours before doors. Greta had the concert program open on her laptop, a twenty-four-page PDF the designer had sent that morning, and exactly one job left on her list: post a PDF to Facebook so people could read the song notes and singer bios before they arrived. The choir's Page had nine hundred followers. Half of them would check it on the bus ride over.
She had done this the slow way before. It was not a good memory.
Twenty-Four Pages and a Screenshot Habit
Last season she had screenshotted every page. Open the PDF, screenshot, crop, name the file, repeat. Twenty-something times. Then upload them in order, except two ended up out of sequence and someone commented "is page 6 missing?" before she noticed.
This time the program was longer and she had a rehearsal to run at 2. The designer's file looked great on screen, but Facebook doesn't read PDFs. It wanted photos. And the last six pages were the sponsor wall and a seating chart she did not want public anyway.
She tried dragging the PDF straight into a new Facebook post out of habit. Facebook accepted it as a file attachment nobody on a phone would tap. Not what she wanted.
A Search She Almost Didn't Bother With
She typed "share a PDF on Facebook as photos" into Google, not expecting much. The first useful result was a MyTools page that did exactly the one thing: take a PDF, turn each page into a photo, and publish it to a Facebook Page.
She had used MyTools once to merge two PDFs for a grant application, so the name wasn't new. She clicked through.
Eighteen Pages, One Tab
She dropped the PDF in. The tool rendered thumbnails of all twenty-four pages so she could see what she was working with. There was the cover, the welcome letter, the program order, the bios. And there, at the end, the seating chart she wanted to skip.
She switched the page range from "all" to custom and set it to 1 through 18. The last six dimmed out in the preview. Then she clicked to connect Facebook. A login window popped up, the real Facebook one, and she picked the choir's Page from the list. She never typed her password into MyTools itself, which she noticed and liked.
She wrote a short caption, "Tonight's program, doors at 7, see you there," and hit post. The pages were converted at 150 DPI and pushed straight to the Page. No file saved anywhere, the tool said. Around forty seconds for the whole thing.
Live Before Rehearsal
By the time she looked up, all eighteen pages were on the Page as a single photo post, in order, the cover first. She got a direct link back to it, copied it, and pinned the post to the top of the Page.
Two likes already. One was the alto who always arrived early.
She made her 2 PM rehearsal with a minute to spare. Nobody asked where page 6 went, because page 6 was right where it belonged.
What Was Different This Time
No app to install on a borrowed laptop, no screenshots, no renaming. The part that actually mattered to her was the page range, being able to leave the seating chart out without first having to pull those pages into a separate file. And nothing about the file lived on anyone's server afterward, which for a program with performers' names on it felt right.
She kept the tool bookmarked. The spring concert program would be longer, and now the posting step is the easy part.
The choir's program was live, in order, and pinned with five hours to spare. Try PDF to Facebook for free →