FIG to JPS conversion is the process of transforming a Xfig vector drawing (.fig) into a JPS stereoscopic JPEG pair (.jps) file suitable for stereoscopic viewers or 3D displays. This conversion typically involves rasterizing vector elements from the FIG file into left/right image channels, arranging them as a side-by-side or interleaved JPS format, and optionally applying compression or depth adjustments to preserve 3D effect.
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Read guide →Drag your .FIG file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .jps as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .JPS file once ready.
FIG files typically have the MIME type application/x-fig and are used by drawing programs such as Xfig for vector illustrations. JPS files share the image/jpeg MIME type and contain side-by-side stereo JPEG images for 3D display. Conversion involves translating vector graphics into a rasterized stereoscopic JPEG format compatible with 3D image viewers.
The JPS (.JPS) 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, JPS files generally serve the purpose of storing image effectively within their domain.
Easily convert your FIG files to JPS format using our secure and user-friendly online FIG to JPS converter. Whether you need to optimize graphics or ensure compatibility, our tool offers a seamless conversion process without requiring software installation.
FIG files primarily store vector-based drawings used in technical and scientific contexts, while JPS files are stereoscopic JPEG images designed for 3D viewing. FIG is more focused on editable graphics content, whereas JPS supports immersive image formats for enhanced visualization. Choosing JPS is ideal for sharing 3D images, whereas FIG suits detailed design work.
Keep source FIG drawings under 50–100 MB for smooth browser-based conversion; very complex vector files with many objects may require desktop tools.
To preserve quality, rasterize at a higher DPI (300–600 DPI) before creating the JPS and choose high JPEG quality (85–95) to reduce compression artifacts.
For convincing stereoscopic results, generate accurate left/right views from your scene (offset camera or layer shift) rather than duplicating a single view; simple horizontal parallax adjustments work for 3D effect.
Batch conversion: combine multiple FIG pages into a zip and convert server-side or use a command-line tool; large batches are best handled on desktop converters to avoid upload limits.
This FIG to JPS converter saved me hours converting my technical drawings.
John M.
Graphic Designer
The quality of the JPS output exceeded my expectations and worked perfectly with my 3D viewer.
Emily R.
3D Artist
Quick and easy conversion process without any software downloads, very convenient.
Mark L.
Engineer
Start your free FIG to JPS conversion now.
Drag your file here to to upload.
Up to 250MB
Format limitation: FIG is vector-based and can contain layers/objects that need rasterization—this means some editable vector properties are lost in JPS, which is a raster stereoscopic JPEG format.