PFM to OXPS conversion is the process of transforming a PFM (Portable Float Map) image file—an image format that stores high dynamic range, 32-bit floating-point pixel data—into an OXPS (Open XML Paper Specification) document, which encapsulates fixed-layout page content suitable for printing and sharing. This conversion rasterizes the high-precision image into a paged, print-ready OXPS file while preserving visual fidelity and layout for distribution or archival.
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Read guide →Drag your .PFM file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .oxps as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .OXPS file once ready.
PFM files typically use the MIME type 'application/x-portable-font-map' and are common in graphic and printing environments. OXPS files use 'application/oxps' and serve as XML Paper Specification documents optimized for fixed-layout printing and viewing. The PFM format does not rely on codecs, whereas OXPS is based on Open XML standards that allow for rich document features.
The OXPS (.OXPS) format is commonly used for image. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like PFM.
While specific technical details aren't available here, OXPS files generally serve the purpose of storing image effectively within their domain.
Convert your PFM files to OXPS effortlessly with our reliable online converter. Designed for fast, secure, and high-quality file transformations, our tool makes converting PFM to OXPS straightforward for all users.
PFM files primarily store image or print data in a raw format, often used in specialized graphics workflows. OXPS is a fixed-layout document format designed for reliable viewing and printing on Windows systems, offering enhanced portability. While PFM focuses on raw image data, OXPS provides structured document presentation with better support for annotations and metadata.
Keep individual PFM files below ~200–300MB for smooth browser-based conversion; very large HDR PFMs can slow or fail conversion processes.
To preserve color and dynamic range, render PFM to a high-bit-depth intermediate (16‑bit/channel TIFF) or use a high-resolution DPI (300–600) when producing the OXPS.
For large collections, use batch conversion or a desktop converter to avoid upload limits and to apply consistent compression and color-profile settings.
Be aware that OXPS is page-oriented and not an HDR-native image container: extreme HDR data will be tone-mapped during rasterization, so expect some loss of absolute dynamic range.
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Up to 250MB
If final output is for printing, choose lossless embedded image compression and include an appropriate ICC profile to maintain print color accuracy.