PGM to MNG Converter

Turn your PGM files into MNG format with ease online

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Cross-Platform Support

The converter is platform-independent. Whether you use a PC, Mac, or phone — PGM to MNG conversion works everywhere.

Instant Results

Your PGM to MNG conversion is done within moments. The pipeline is optimized for speed and minimal wait times.

Quality Preserved

Your original PGM content is preserved in the MNG result. The conversion process does not introduce unwanted artifacts.

How to convert PGM to MNG

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

PGM (Portable Graymap) is the grayscale member of the Netpbm image format family, created by Jef Poskanzer in 1988 as part of the Pbmplus toolkit for Unix systems. PGM stores single-channel intensity images where each pixel holds a gray value from 0 (black) to a user-specified maximum (typically 255 for 8-bit or 65535 for 16-bit). The format exists in ASCII (magic number P2), where pixel values are written as decimal text numbers separated by whitespace, and binary (magic number P5), where values are stored as raw bytes. Both variants begin with a header specifying the magic number, width, height, and maximum gray value. PGM was designed as the grayscale intermediate in Netpbm's convert-process-convert pipeline philosophy: source images from any format are converted to PGM, processed using Netpbm's extensive command-line tool library, then converted to the target format. One advantage is format transparency — the ASCII variant makes image data directly readable by humans and trivially processable by text tools like awk and grep, invaluable for debugging and education. The scientific and computer vision community's adoption is another strength: PGM's straightforward single-channel representation makes it a natural format for image analysis algorithms, and many academic papers and course materials use PGM examples. The format is supported by ImageMagick, GIMP, and countless image processing libraries, and remains standard input for many research tools and benchmarks.
Developer: Jef Poskanzer
Initial release: 1988
MNG (Multiple-image Network Graphics) is an animation and multiple-image format designed as the animated counterpart to PNG, with its specification reaching version 1.0 on January 31, 2001. Developed by Glenn Randers-Pehrson and members of the PNG development community, MNG extends PNG's capabilities with support for frame-based animation sequences, slide shows, complex sprite overlays, and JNG (JPEG Network Graphics) frames for lossy compression of photographic content within the same container. An MNG file consists of a series of chunks (following PNG's chunk-based architecture): MHDR and MEND chunks bookend the datastream, with embedded PNG or JNG images as individual frames and control chunks (DEFI, FRAM, LOOP, ENDL, TERM, BACK, BASI, CLON, PAST, DISC, SHOW) directing playback timing, looping behavior, layer compositing, and memory management. The format supports both full-frame replacement and delta (difference) updates for efficient encoding of animations with static backgrounds, as well as object-based animation where sprites are defined once and repositioned across frames. One advantage is technical sophistication: MNG provides a level of animation control that GIF and APNG cannot match — frame-accurate timing, nested loops, conditional branches, interframe compression, and mixed lossy/lossless content within a single animation. The PNG-based foundation ensures lossless quality with full alpha transparency for each frame. MNG is supported by ImageMagick, GIMP, and various media players, though browser support was limited, which led to APNG's emergence as a simpler alternative for web animation.
Initial release: January 31, 2001

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert PGM to MNG?

Moving to MNG enables multiple network graphics animation — better suited for web publishing, printing, or sharing across platforms.

What programs open MNG files?

Use XnView, ImageMagick, some browsers with plugin to view MNG files. The format is well-supported across desktop and mobile platforms.

Will I lose image quality converting PGM to MNG?

The conversion preserves the original quality of your PGM file. Any inherent quality limits in PGM carry over, but nothing additional is lost.

Can I convert multiple PGM files to MNG at once?

Absolutely — queue up multiple PGM files and the converter handles each one, producing MNG outputs for all of them.

Is the PGM to MNG conversion instant?

Yes, for most files the conversion happens almost instantly. Larger PGM images may take a few extra seconds to process.

Do I need to create an account to convert?

No sign-up necessary. The converter works without an account for regular PGM to MNG conversions.