FIG to CUR conversion is the process of converting vector or bitmap drawings stored in the Xfig (.fig) format into Windows cursor (.cur) files so they can be used as system or application cursors. This conversion translates drawing elements, layers, and pixel data from FIG into the hotspot and size-constrained CUR format while optionally rasterizing vector content to the required cursor sizes and color depths.
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Read guide →Drag your .FIG file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .cur as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .CUR file once ready.
FIG files typically use the 'application/x-xfig' MIME type and are widely used for technical drawings created in Xfig. CUR files use the 'image/x-icon' MIME type and are standard for Windows cursor icons, often encoded with PNG or BMP compression. Conversion involves adapting vector-based FIG drawings into rasterized cursor formats with hotspot positioning.
The CUR (.CUR) format is commonly used for image. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like FIG.
While specific technical details aren't available here, CUR files generally serve the purpose of storing image effectively within their domain.
Convert your FIG files to CUR format quickly and effortlessly with our powerful online converter. Designed for users needing seamless FIG to CUR conversions, our tool offers a fast, secure, and user-friendly experience.
FIG files are primarily vector graphic drawings used in design and engineering, while CUR files are specifically designed for custom mouse cursors. FIG files contain detailed scalable graphics, whereas CUR files focus on small icon-sized images with cursor hotspot data. Converting FIG to CUR enables using detailed vector designs as interactive cursors.
Keep individual FIG drawings under 5 MB for faster uploads and more reliable rasterization; very large vector scenes can be simplified before conversion.
To preserve visual fidelity, export or flatten complex vector effects (gradients, custom patterns) to high-resolution bitmaps inside FIG before converting to CUR.
When creating cursors, set a clear hotspot in the source or choose the hotspot during conversion so the pointer behaves as expected.
For batch conversion, group FIG files with consistent target sizes and color depth; convert in batches of 20–50 files to avoid timeouts.
The FIG to CUR converter saved me so much time on my project.
Emily R.
Graphic Designer
Really easy to use and the output CUR files worked perfectly.
John M.
Software Developer
Loved how simple and fast the FIG conversion process was.
Sophia L.
UI/UX Specialist
Start your free FIG to CUR conversion now.
Drag your file here to to upload.
Up to 250MB
Limitations: CUR files require fixed pixel sizes and support transparency via alpha or mask, so fully preserving scalable vector detail from FIG is not always possible.