GIF to EXR Converter

Convert GIF images to OpenEXR high dynamic range format

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VFX Industry Standard

OpenEXR is the format of choice for film VFX, CGI rendering, and high-end compositing — convert your GIF into a production-ready asset.

HDR Precision

EXR stores floating-point color values with extreme precision, enabling advanced compositing operations impossible in standard image formats.

Online Processing

No VFX software needed for the conversion. Convertio generates the EXR on its servers — upload and download entirely through the browser.

How to convert GIF to EXR

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) was introduced by CompuServe on June 15, 1987 as a platform-independent image format for transmitting color graphics over the CompuServe online service's modem-speed connections. The format uses LZW (Lempel-Ziv-Welch) lossless compression on indexed-color images with a palette of up to 256 colors selected from a 24-bit RGB color space. GIF's most distinctive capability is animation: multiple image frames can be stored sequentially within a single file, each with independent delay timing, disposal methods, and local color palettes, enabling short looping animations without any video codec or player. The format also supports binary transparency (one palette entry designated as fully transparent) and interlaced display for progressive rendering. GIF became synonymous with web culture — animated GIFs proliferated across early websites, messaging platforms, and social media, evolving into a communication medium in their own right. One advantage is universal animation support — GIF animations play natively in every web browser, email client, messaging app, and social platform without plugins, codecs, or compatibility concerns, a level of ubiquity no other animation format has achieved. The lossless compression on palette-based images provides another strength: graphics with flat colors, text, and sharp edges (logos, diagrams, UI elements) compress efficiently without the artifacts that affect JPEG. Although the LZW patents that once threatened GIF's use expired in 2004, and newer formats like WebP and AVIF offer superior compression with full-color animation, GIF's cultural entrenchment keeps it irreplaceable for casual animated content.
Developer: CompuServe
Initial release: June 15, 1987
EXR is a high-dynamic-range raster image format developed by Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) internally since 1999 and publicly released as open-source software in January 2003. OpenEXR was created to meet the demanding requirements of feature film visual effects compositing, where scenes routinely contain extreme brightness ranges — from deep shadows to specular highlights on water, metal, or light sources — that exceed the precision of 8-bit or 16-bit integer formats. EXR stores pixel data in 16-bit floating-point (half) or 32-bit floating-point per channel, providing over 30 stops of dynamic range with smooth precision across the entire luminance spectrum. The format supports an arbitrary number of channels (not just RGBA), tiled and scanline storage, multiple compression methods (lossless ZIP, lossy B44 and DWAA/DWAB for preview quality), multi-part files containing multiple views or layers, and deep pixel data where each pixel stores multiple depth-sorted samples for volumetric effects. One advantage is compositing fidelity: the floating-point precision means that color grading, exposure adjustments, lighting changes, and multi-layer compositing operations produce mathematically correct results without the banding, clipping, or quantization artifacts inherent in integer formats. EXR's adoption as the VFX industry standard is another core strength — it is the default interchange format for Foundry Nuke, Autodesk Flame, Blackmagic Fusion, Adobe After Effects, and every major 3D renderer, and its open-source C++ library is embedded in hundreds of production tools.
Initial release: January 2003

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert GIF to EXR?

EXR stores images with floating-point precision and high dynamic range — essential for VFX compositing, film production, and professional rendering workflows.

What software opens EXR?

Nuke, After Effects, Blender, Photoshop, DaVinci Resolve, and most VFX and 3D rendering applications support OpenEXR natively.

Does EXR improve GIF quality?

EXR enables HDR and floating-point data, but cannot recover detail absent from the original 256-color GIF. It prepares the image for HDR pipelines.

Is EXR used in film production?

Extensively — EXR is the industry standard for VFX, CGI, and film compositing. Industrial Light & Magic developed it specifically for these workflows.

Will the file be much larger?

Yes — EXR files with floating-point data are larger than GIF. Various compression methods (ZIP, PIZ, DWAA) are available to reduce size.

GIF to EXR Quality Rating

4.9 (11 votes)
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