SR2 Image to STAROFFICE Document conversion is the process of transforming Sony RAW Image Format files (SR2) into STAROFFICE Document files (SXW), typically by extracting image data and embedding it into a document page or converting embedded visual content into an editable document layout. This conversion is useful when you need to present, annotate, or distribute high-quality camera RAW images inside the STAROFFICE (OpenOffice/StarOffice-compatible) document format for sharing or printing.
Related guides
Practical guides to help you choose formats, preserve quality, and avoid common conversion problems.
WebP has quietly become the default image format of the modern web, delivering 25-35% smaller files than JPG and PNG with universal browser support. This 2026 guide covers current adoption stats, browser compatibility, WordPress integration, conversion workflows, and when to choose WebP over AVIF for optimal Core Web Vitals performance.
Read guide →Not sure whether to save your image as PNG or JPG? This detailed comparison covers compression, transparency, file size, web performance, and real-world use cases so you can pick the right format every time — with conversion links when you need to switch.
Read guide →Learn how to convert HEIC to JPG for maximum compatibility. This guide explains what HEIC is, why iPhones use it, the key differences between HEIC and JPG, and walks through every conversion method including online tools, iPhone settings, Windows, and Mac.
Read guide →Drag your .SR2 file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .sxw as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .SXW file once ready.
The SR2 format typically uses the MIME type image/x-sony-sr2 and stores raw image sensor data from Sony cameras. STAROFFICE Document files have the MIME type application/vnd.sun.xml.writer and are based on XML for office document interoperability. SR2 files require specialized codecs for image processing, while SXW files are compatible with office suites that support OpenDocument standards.
The STAROFFICE Document (.SXW) format is commonly used for image. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like SR2 Image.
While specific technical details aren't available here, STAROFFICE Document files generally serve the purpose of storing image effectively within their domain.
Easily convert your SR2 Image files to STAROFFICE Document (SXW) format using our reliable online SR2 to SXW converter. Designed for fast and efficient conversion, this tool helps you transform specialized image files into editable document formats compatible with STAROFFICE software.
SR2 Image files are raw image formats primarily used for high-quality photography data, while STAROFFICE Documents (SXW) are text-based files designed for creating and editing documents. Whereas SR2 files focus on image detail and precision, SXW files prioritize document structure and textual content management.
Keep individual SR2 files under 100–200MB for faster uploads; very large RAW files can slow conversion or hit service limits.
To preserve image detail, choose SXW output with no recompression or lossless image embedding; avoid aggressive JPEG compression when quality matters.
For many files, use batch conversion to produce one SXW per image or a single multi-page SXW; test with 2–3 files first to confirm layout and size.
Remember that SR2 is a camera RAW format with metadata and 16-bit data that may be flattened to 8-bit color when placed into an SXW, so some tonal precision can be lost.
This converter saved me hours by turning my SR2 photos into editable documents.
Emma L.
Photographer
Simple and fast, perfect for integrating images into my STAROFFICE projects.
Mark D.
Content Creator
Reliable and user-friendly tool for all my SR2 to SXW conversion needs.
Linda K.
Office Manager
Start your free SR2 to SXW conversion now.
Drag your file here to to upload.
Up to 250MB
If you need editable text or OCR from image contents, perform OCR after embedding the image or convert images to high-contrast bitmaps before OCR — SXW itself is a document container, not a RAW image editor.