T42 to RGBA Converter

Render Type 42 fonts as SGI RGBA images with alpha transparency online

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Full Alpha Channel

RGBA provides smooth per-pixel transparency — T42 font renderings composite naturally over any background in VFX and design workflows.

Compositing Standard

SGI RGBA is trusted across professional pipelines. Your T42 font glyphs become texture assets ready for Nuke, After Effects, and 3D renderers.

Private Processing

Uploaded T42 fonts are deleted immediately. RGBA outputs are purged from our servers within 24 hours.

How to convert T42 to RGBA

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

T42 (Type 42) is a PostScript font format developed by Adobe Systems that wraps a TrueType font inside a PostScript font dictionary, enabling PostScript printers equipped with a TrueType rasterizer to print TrueType fonts natively. The name reportedly references Douglas Adams' "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy," where 42 is the answer to the ultimate question. Type 42 was introduced with PostScript interpreter version 2013 in the mid-1990s, with Adobe publishing the formal specification as Technical Note #5012 in July 1998. The format embeds the complete TrueType font data — outlines, hinting instructions, and tables — as a binary string within the PostScript sfnts dictionary entry, while wrapping it in standard PostScript font structure including CharStrings, Encoding, and FontInfo dictionaries. One advantage is preserved TrueType hinting: because the original quadratic spline outlines and grid-fitting instructions are passed directly to the TrueType rasterizer, the printed output matches the screen rendering quality that TrueType hinting was designed to deliver. This is superior to the alternative approach of converting TrueType outlines to Type 1 cubics, which discards hinting. Type 42 also enables PostScript workflows to incorporate the vast library of TrueType fonts bundled with Windows and macOS without manual font conversion. PDF generators commonly use Type 42 embedding when including TrueType fonts in PostScript-based output pipelines. The format bridges two major font technologies that evolved separately, ensuring interoperability across the PostScript and TrueType ecosystems.
Developer: Adobe Systems
Initial release: 1995
RGBA is a raw (headerless) image format that extends the RGB color model with a fourth channel for alpha transparency. Each pixel is stored as four consecutive sample values — red, green, blue, and alpha — written sequentially in scanline order with no container structure, headers, or compression. The alpha channel specifies opacity for each pixel independently: a maximum value means fully opaque, zero means fully transparent, and intermediate values produce semi-transparency. Like its three-channel counterpart, RGBA files require the image dimensions and bit depth to be specified externally since the raw data stream contains no metadata. The format supports 8-bit (four bytes per pixel, 32-bit total), 16-bit, and floating-point channel depths. In compositing workflows, the alpha channel enables layering operations where foreground elements are blended over backgrounds according to their per-pixel opacity — the mathematical foundation for all modern image compositing, described by Porter and Duff in their seminal 1984 paper on digital compositing. One advantage is direct framebuffer compatibility: modern GPU hardware natively processes 32-bit RGBA pixels, so raw RGBA data can be uploaded to texture memory or written from render targets without any format conversion, critical for real-time graphics applications and game engines. The format's simplicity in representing transparent images provides another practical benefit — scientific visualization, medical imaging, and overlay rendering can produce raw RGBA output that any downstream tool can consume without needing a common container format. RGBA files are handled by ImageMagick, FFmpeg, and various graphics and compositing tools.
Initial release: 1990

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert T42 to RGBA?

RGBA adds an alpha transparency channel to SGI images — essential when T42 font renderings need to composite over backgrounds in VFX or 3D scenes.

How do I open an RGBA file?

Blender, Nuke, GIMP, Photoshop, and Maya handle SGI RGBA natively. ImageMagick also reads and writes this format for batch operations.

How does RGBA differ from RGB?

RGBA includes a fourth alpha channel for transparency. RGB stores only color data. Choose RGBA when you need to composite font glyphs over other imagery.

Is batch processing available?

Yes. Upload a set of T42 fonts and Convertio generates individual RGBA images for each.

Is this conversion free?

Yes — T42 to RGBA on Convertio is free with no account required.