DNG to PFM Converter

Quick online DNG to PFM conversion — free and easy

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Fast Results

Most DNG to PFM conversions complete in seconds. Cloud infrastructure ensures your DNG RAW photos are processed quickly and efficiently.

Cloud Conversion

The heavy lifting happens in the cloud — your computer stays responsive while DNG images are converted to PFM on powerful servers.

Faithful Conversion

Expect accurate color and detail in your PFM output — the converter respects the full quality of your original DNG capture.

How to convert DNG to PFM

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

DNG (Digital Negative) is an open, royalty-free RAW image format published by Adobe Systems on September 27, 2004, designed to address the proliferation of incompatible proprietary RAW formats from different camera manufacturers. Based on the TIFF/EP standard (ISO 12234-2), DNG provides a well-documented container for raw sensor data with standardized metadata tags that describe the camera's color filter array pattern, color calibration matrices, default rendering parameters, and opcodes for geometric corrections. The format supports both original raw mosaic data and linear (demosaiced) DNG, as well as lossy DNG using JPEG compression for smaller archive sizes when full quality is not critical. Adobe has iterated the specification through multiple versions, adding support for transparency maps, floating-point HDR data, enhanced color profiles, and semantic masks in newer revisions. One advantage is archival reliability — DNG's published, non-proprietary specification eliminates the risk that a camera manufacturer's format becomes unreadable when that company exits the market or drops support for older models, a concern that motivated Adobe's creation of the format. The format also enables embedded original RAW data, letting users convert their CR2, NEF, or ARW files to DNG while optionally keeping the original bits inside the DNG for reversibility. Broad ecosystem support is another strength: Adobe Lightroom, Photoshop, and Camera Raw treat DNG as a first-class format, and many smartphone manufacturers (including Google and Apple for certain modes) output DNG natively.
Developer: Adobe Systems
Initial release: September 27, 2004
PFM (Portable Float Map) is a floating-point raster image format devised by Paul Debevec around 2001, designed to store high-dynamic-range image data with the simplicity of the Netpbm family of formats. PFM extends the PBM/PGM/PPM philosophy — minimal header, raw data, no compression — to 32-bit IEEE floating-point samples, providing direct access to HDR pixel values without the encoding overhead of formats like OpenEXR or the limited range of Radiance HDR's RGBE encoding. The file structure is deliberately minimal: a two-character magic number ('Pf' for grayscale, 'PF' for color), width and height on the next line, a scale/endianness indicator (negative for little-endian, positive for big-endian, with magnitude indicating scale factor), and then the raw 32-bit float data for each pixel. PFM files store one float per pixel for grayscale or three floats (RGB) per pixel for color, with no compression, alpha channel, or metadata support. The format emerged from the HDR imaging research community where Debevec's work on image-based lighting and light stage capture required a simple, unambiguous way to store linear floating-point radiance values that could be easily exchanged between research tools. One advantage is absolute simplicity for HDR data: PFM can be read and written in a few lines of code in any language that supports IEEE floats, with no library dependencies — ideal for research prototyping and quick data exchange between custom tools. The format's widespread adoption in the computer vision and computational photography research community is another practical strength — optical flow benchmarks (Middlebury), depth estimation datasets, and radiance field captures commonly use PFM. The format is supported by ImageMagick, OpenCV, HDR Shop, and Luminance HDR.
Developer: Paul Debevec
Initial release: 2001

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DNG to PFM?

HDR formats like PFM preserve a wider luminance range than standard images. Converting from DNG unlocks tone mapping and HDR processing options.

What programs open PFM?

You can open PFM in HDR imaging tools, Photoshop, GIMP, and float-map capable editors.

Do I need to install software?

No installation required. The DNG to PFM converter runs entirely in your web browser — just upload, convert, and download the result.

What happens to my uploaded DNG images?

Your DNG images are deleted right after conversion. The resulting PFM output is removed from servers within 24 hours for complete privacy.

Can I convert multiple DNG photos at once?

Yes — batch upload is supported. Queue several DNG images and convert them all to PFM in one session without repeating the process.

Are DNG and PFM the same quality?

DNG stores raw sensor data while PFM is a processed format. The conversion produces the best quality PFM can support from your original RAW data.

DNG to PFM Quality Rating

3.8 (2 votes)
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