RAF Image to HDR conversion is the process of converting Fujifilm RAW files (RAF) into High Dynamic Range (HDR) image files that preserve and extend tonal range and color detail for improved highlights and shadows. This conversion extracts the sensor's wide exposure and color data from RAF, then maps or merges exposures and tone information into HDR formats for enhanced display or post-processing workflows.
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Read guide →Drag your .RAF file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .hdr as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .HDR file once ready.
RAF files typically use the image/raf MIME type and are raw sensor data formats from Fuji cameras. They require specialized codecs or software for decoding and editing. HDR images use formats like Radiance (.hdr) or OpenEXR, supporting extended luminance and color ranges, commonly used in photo editing and visual effects pipelines.
The HDR (.HDR) format is commonly used for image. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like RAF Image.
While specific technical details aren't available here, HDR files generally serve the purpose of storing image effectively within their domain.
Convert your RAF Image files to HDR format effortlessly using our online RAF to HDR converter. Designed for photographers and digital artists, this tool ensures high-quality output while preserving details and dynamic range. No downloads or installations are required—simply upload your RAF file and get your HDR image in seconds.
RAF Images are unprocessed raw files captured directly by Fuji cameras, containing all sensor data with a wide dynamic range but limited compatibility. HDR files store high dynamic range imaging data optimized for displaying detailed light and color levels across devices. While RAF files serve as raw sources, HDR files focus on enhanced image presentation and editing flexibility.
Keep original RAF files whenever possible; RAF stores full sensor data and is best for accurate HDR reconstruction.
Optimal working file sizes: for single-image HDR tone mapping, use RAF originals (typically 20–50MB); for batch EXR output, expect 50–200MB per image depending on float precision.
Preserve quality: choose 32-bit float EXR or 16-bit float TIFF for minimal quantization and maximal dynamic range retention; avoid downsampling before HDR conversion.
Batch conversion advice: process RAF batches with the same camera model and exposure settings using scripted or batch tools to ensure consistent tone mapping and metadata handling.
This RAF converter made my workflow so much easier and the HDR results look amazing.
Emily R.
Photographer
Fast and reliable RAF to HDR conversion, highly recommend it for professionals.
Jason M.
Graphic Designer
The online tool preserved all the details from my RAF files perfectly after conversion.
Linda K.
Photo Editor
Start your free RAF to HDR conversion now.
Drag your file here to to upload.
Up to 250MB
Format-specific limitations: RAF does not contain multiple exposures in one file, so true multi-exposure HDR usually requires bracketed RAFs; some RAF variants use X-Trans demosaicing that can affect highlight recovery and require camera-specific RAW decoders.