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HDR to DOTM Converter

Seamless HDR to DOTM conversion online — try now

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Faithful Rendering

HDR imagery converts to DOTM with careful attention to color and detail. The output faithfully represents the source material.

Nothing to Install

The entire HDR to DOTM conversion happens in your web browser. No downloads, no plugins — just a clean online tool.

Cross-Platform Access

Convert HDR to DOTM on Windows, macOS, Linux, or mobile devices. The browser-based tool adapts to any screen and platform.

How to convert HDR to DOTM

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

HDR (also known as RGBE or Radiance HDR) is a high-dynamic-range image format created by Greg Ward Larson as part of the Radiance) lighting simulation system, developed at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory starting in 1985 with the HDR format emerging around 1989. The format stores floating-point RGB pixel values using a compact 32-bit-per-pixel encoding called RGBE (Red, Green, Blue, Exponent): three 8-bit mantissa bytes share a single 8-bit exponent, representing luminance values across a range of roughly 76 orders of magnitude while keeping file sizes comparable to standard 24-bit images. HDR files begin with a text header containing rendering and exposure metadata, followed by the RGBE pixel data compressed with a scanline-oriented run-length encoding scheme. The format captures the full luminance range of real-world scenes — from deep shadows to direct sunlight — enabling physically accurate lighting calculations, tone mapping to different display conditions, and post-capture exposure adjustment without the clipping artifacts inherent in 8-bit formats. One advantage is the format's foundational role in HDR imaging: Radiance HDR pioneered the concept of storing real-world luminance values in image files, and the .hdr format became the standard for light probe images and environment maps used in image-based lighting across the 3D rendering industry. The format's compact encoding is another practical strength — the RGBE scheme provides far more dynamic range than 8-bit formats while using only 33% more storage per pixel, a favorable tradeoff that made HDR practical on storage-limited systems of the late 1980s. HDR files are supported by Photoshop, GIMP, ImageMagick, Blender, and all major 3D renderers.
Developer: Greg Ward Larson
Initial release: 1989
DOTM is a macro-enabled template format for Microsoft Word, introduced with Office 2007 as part of the Office Open XML family. DOTM combines the template functionality of DOTX — providing reusable styles, page layouts, boilerplate content, and formatting definitions — with the ability to embed VBA macro code that executes in documents created from the template. The format is a ZIP archive containing XML parts for styles, document defaults, and theme definitions, plus a vbaProject.bin stream for the VBA project. This combination enables organizations to distribute not just visual consistency but also functional automation: every document created from a DOTM template inherits both the formatting framework and programmatic capabilities. Common use cases include templates that auto-populate document fields from corporate directories, enforce naming conventions, generate tables of contents, insert dynamic headers with project metadata, or validate document structure before submission. One advantage is embedded workflow automation — a DOTM template can include initialization macros that configure the document environment, register custom ribbon commands, and connect to data sources the moment a new document is created from it. The distinct .dotm extension allows administrators to apply differentiated trust policies for macro-containing templates versus standard DOTX files. DOTM is supported exclusively in Microsoft Word desktop editions where VBA execution is available.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: January 30, 2007

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert HDR to DOTM?

Architectural visualization teams need to share lighting references — HDR to DOTM creates images reviewable on any screen.

What programs open DOTM files?

Microsoft Word opens DOTM templates with macro support. LibreOffice handles them without macros

How many HDR files can I convert at once?

You can upload multiple HDR files in one session. Each converts to DOTM separately, and all results are downloadable upon completion.

Is tonemapping applied during conversion?

When converting Radiance HDR luminance data to a displayable format like DOTM, tonemapping maps the full range into visible output.

Will the converted DOTM keep the original resolution?

Yes — the default conversion preserves the original pixel dimensions

Are colors preserved in the HDR to DOTM conversion?

HDR stores extended dynamic range data. Converting to DOTM maps that range into the displayable gamut while retaining visual accuracy.