DFONT to HEIF Converter

Create HEIF font specimen images from Mac DFONT online

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Efficient Encoding

HEIF compression produces remarkably small image files — your DFONT font specimens take up minimal storage without sacrificing visual clarity.

All Platforms

Upload DFONT from any operating system and receive HEIF output via your browser — no macOS or special codec packs needed for the conversion.

Secure Files

All uploaded DFONT data is deleted after conversion finishes. HEIF output is purged from our servers within 24 hours for complete privacy.

How to convert DFONT to HEIF

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose heif or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your heif file right afterwards

About formats

DFONT (Data Fork TrueType) is a font file format introduced by Apple with Mac OS X 10.0 in March 2001, created to solve a fundamental compatibility problem in the transition from classic Mac OS to the Unix-based OS X architecture. Classic Mac fonts stored glyph data in the resource fork — a secondary file stream specific to the HFS file system — but OS X's Unix foundation and its use of UFS had no native resource fork support. DFONT relocates the entire resource fork structure into the data fork, wrapping the same TrueType font tables in a resource map that standard OS X typography APIs can read. The file is essentially a resource-fork-less TrueType suitcase. Apple bundled DFONT as the default format for system fonts shipped with OS X, and it remains present in macOS system directories. One advantage is seamless backward compatibility with Apple's existing font rendering stack — the internal structure mirrors classic resource-fork fonts, so CoreText and its predecessors handle DFONTs without any special conversion path. The single-fork design is another practical strength, ensuring that DFONT files survive intact when stored on non-HFS volumes, transferred over networks, or managed by version control systems. While Apple has increasingly moved toward OpenType (.otf/.ttc) for newer system fonts, DFONT files continue to appear in macOS installations and in font collections originating from the OS X era.
Developer: Apple Computer
Initial release: 2001
HEIF (High Efficiency Image File Format) is a container format for images and image sequences standardized by the Moving Picture Experts Group as ISO/IEC 23008-12, first published in 2015. HEIF is built on the ISO Base Media File Format (ISOBMFF, the same container used for MP4 video), providing a flexible structure that can hold single images, image collections, image sequences (like animations or bursts), and derived images with non-destructive editing operations. The container is codec-agnostic — while the most common implementation pairs HEIF with HEVC/H.265 compression (branded as HEIC by Apple), the standard also accommodates AV1 compression (creating the AVIF variant), H.266/VVC, and other future codecs. HEIF supports features that JPEG lacks: 10-bit and 12-bit color depth, wide color gamuts (Display P3, BT.2020), lossless compression, alpha transparency, depth maps, thumbnail images, and Exif/XMP metadata — all within a single file. Auxiliary image items can store computational photography data like depth maps, HDR gain maps, and semantic segmentation masks. One advantage is the format's future-proof architecture: by separating the container from the codec, HEIF can adopt newer, more efficient compression technologies without changing the file structure, metadata handling, or application-level APIs. The substantial compression improvement over JPEG is another core strength — HEVC-based HEIF typically achieves 40-50% file size reduction compared to JPEG at the same visual quality, beneficial for storage and bandwidth. HEIF is supported by Apple's ecosystem (iOS, macOS), Windows 10/11, Android 10+, GIMP, ImageMagick, and Adobe products.
Initial release: 2015

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DFONT to HEIF?

HEIF provides next-generation image compression — creating compact, high-quality glyph specimens from your Mac font that work on modern Apple and Android devices.

How do I open a HEIF file?

Apple Photos, Windows Photos (with HEIF extension), and Android Gallery open HEIF natively. GIMP and ImageMagick also read HEIF on all platforms.

Is HEIF different from HEIC?

HEIC is Apple-specific HEIF using HEVC coding. HEIF is the broader standard that can use various codecs. In practice, both terms are often used interchangeably.

Does HEIF store metadata?

Yes. HEIF supports EXIF metadata, color profiles, and depth maps — though for font specimen images, the standard color and resolution data is most relevant.

Is this conversion free?

Completely. Convertio converts DFONT to HEIF at no charge — online, in your browser, without any registration or software downloads.