Select the page of the PDF you are interested in if the PDF is a multi-page document (Illustrator will only open one page at a time).
Go to File > Save As (Shift + Ctrl + S).
From the Format drop-down menu, select SVG (*.SVG). Save As.
In the resulting dialog box:
Under SVG Profiles, choose a profile (usually SVG 1.0 or SVG 1.1).
Under Type, if you are not using
web-safe fonts, select Convert to outline. (Warning: this greatly increases the size of your file.) If you are using web-safe fonts, choose SVG; under Subsetting, choose None (Use System Fonts).
Click OK.
Nominally resizing an SVG in Adobe Illustrator
Open your file.
Make sure that none of the layers are locked. (Window > Layers; a padlock symbol next to a layer indicates it is locked.) Make sure all of the layers are visible. (An eye symbol next to a layer indicates it is visible.)
Select > All (Ctrl + A).
To resize:
Either go to Object > Transform > Scale.... Select the Uniform radio button and type in a percentage; greater than 100% makes your object larger, less than 100% makes it smaller. Make sure Scale Strokes & Effects under Options is checked. Click OK.
Or, to free transform in proportion, click and hold on a corner of the outermost bounding box, hold down the Shift key, and drag.
Select the page of the PDF you are interested in if the PDF is a multi-page document (Illustrator will only open one page at a time).
Go to File > Save As (Shift + Ctrl + S).
From the Format drop-down menu, select SVG (*.SVG). Save As.
In the resulting dialog box:
Under SVG Profiles, choose a profile (usually SVG 1.0 or SVG 1.1).
Under Type, if you are not using
web-safe fonts, select Convert to outline. (Warning: this greatly increases the size of your file.) If you are using web-safe fonts, choose SVG; under Subsetting, choose None (Use System Fonts).
Click OK.
Nominally resizing an SVG in Adobe Illustrator
Open your file.
Make sure that none of the layers are locked. (Window > Layers; a padlock symbol next to a layer indicates it is locked.) Make sure all of the layers are visible. (An eye symbol next to a layer indicates it is visible.)
Select > All (Ctrl + A).
To resize:
Either go to Object > Transform > Scale.... Select the Uniform radio button and type in a percentage; greater than 100% makes your object larger, less than 100% makes it smaller. Make sure Scale Strokes & Effects under Options is checked. Click OK.
Or, to free transform in proportion, click and hold on a corner of the outermost bounding box, hold down the Shift key, and drag.