FIG to TIFF conversion is the process of transforming vector-based drawing files saved in the FIG format (used by Xfig and related diagram tools) into raster TIFF images suitable for printing, archival, or use in software that requires bitmap input. This conversion rasterizes vector objects, preserving layout and visual detail while producing a widely supported, high-quality TIFF file with selectable resolution and compression settings.
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Read guide →Drag your .FIG file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .tiff as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .TIFF file once ready.
FIG files typically have the MIME type application/x-xfig and are used for vector-based drawings. TIFF files use the MIME type image/tiff and support various codecs including LZW and PackBits for lossless compression. FIG files are common in technical and engineering categories, whereas TIFF is preferred for image archiving and professional printing.
The TIFF (.TIFF) 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, TIFF files generally serve the purpose of storing image effectively within their domain.
Our Online FIG to TIFF Converter allows you to convert FIG drawing files into TIFF images quickly and without any software installation. Whether you need TIFF files for publishing, sharing, or archiving, our tool delivers high-quality results with minimal effort.
FIG files are primarily used as vector graphics for technical drawings and diagrams, often editable within specialized software. TIFF files, on the other hand, are raster image files widely supported across platforms for high-quality image storage. While FIG files focus on editability and scalability, TIFF files prioritize compatibility and image fidelity.
Keep source FIG files under about 100–300 MB for fastest browser-based conversion; very large FIG drawings (with many embedded bitmaps) may slow processing.
Preserve vector quality by choosing a high DPI (300–600 DPI) when rasterizing for print; for screen use 72–150 DPI is usually sufficient.
For minimal file sizes without losing visible detail, use LZW or Deflate compression on TIFF outputs; avoid lossy formats since TIFF is typically used for lossless needs.
Use batch conversion tools or command-line utilities if you have many FIG files; this avoids manual export in Xfig and speeds up workflow.
This FIG to TIFF converter saved me hours of work by quickly producing print-ready images.
Eva M.
Architect
The quality of the TIFF output is excellent and exactly what I needed for my reports.
Liam S.
Engineer
Easy to use and reliable, perfect for converting FIG drawings on the go.
Nora P.
Graphic Designer
Start your free FIG to TIFF conversion now.
Drag your file here to to upload.
Up to 250MB
Format limitation: FIG is vector-oriented and supports editable primitives and LaTeX text—these become flattened bitmaps in TIFF and cannot be edited as vector objects after conversion.