JPS to FTS conversion is the process of transforming a stereoscopic JPEG (JPS) image — a side-by-side or dual-image format based on the JPEG standard — into an FTS image container used for flat/stitched target formats (FTS). This conversion extracts the left and right image frames or single-frame data from the JPS file, recompresses or repackages them per FTS specification, and writes metadata (orientation, stereo layout) so the resulting FTS file is compatible with FTS-enabled viewers and workflows.
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Read guide →Drag your .JPS file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .fts as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .FTS file once ready.
JPS files usually use the MIME type image/x-jps and store stereoscopic image pairs in JPEG format. FTS files often have the MIME type application/octet-stream or a specialized type depending on the software, used primarily for storing texture data with support for various codecs. Conversion typically involves decoding the JPEG-based JPS and re-encoding the data into the FTS format optimized for rendering or texture mapping.
The FTS (.FTS) format is commonly used for image. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like JPS.
While specific technical details aren't available here, FTS files generally serve the purpose of storing image effectively within their domain.
Our online JPS to FTS converter allows you to transform your JPS files into the FTS format effortlessly. Designed for users who need fast and reliable file conversion without the hassle of downloads, this tool supports seamless conversion with just a few clicks.
JPS files are typically used for stereoscopic 3D images, supporting side-by-side image pairs, while FTS files are often employed for advanced texture storage and rendering. FTS format offers enhanced compatibility with specific rendering engines and applications compared to the more general-purpose JPS format. Choosing the right format depends on your intended use, with FTS being ideal for texture-focused tasks.
Keep original JPS files under 20–50MB when possible for faster, more reliable conversions; larger source files increase processing time and memory use.
To preserve visual fidelity, select a high FTS quality setting or use lossless FTS output when available; avoid multiple recompressions by converting from original JPS instead of a previously compressed copy.
For bulk workflows, batch-convert JPS collections using a tool that supports parallel processing and preserves filename mapping; test with a small sample to validate stereo alignment and metadata before committing the full batch.
This JPS to FTS converter saved me hours of work.
Michael R.
Photographer
Easy and fast conversion with no quality loss.
Anna L.
3D Artist
Perfect tool for integrating texture files into my projects.
David K.
Developer
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Note format limitations: some FTS implementations may not support progressive JPEG features from JPS or certain EXIF tags; very old JPS variants with nonstandard metadata may require preprocessing.
If color accuracy matters, transfer embedded ICC profiles during conversion and avoid automatic color-space conversions unless intentional.