TIFF to FIG conversion is the process of transforming images stored in the TIFF (Tagged Image File Format), a flexible raster format often used for high-quality photography and scanned documents, into FIG files used by Xfig (a vector-based drawing tool). This conversion typically involves raster-to-vector considerations or embedding the raster TIFF inside a FIG-compatible object so the image can be used and edited within Xfig or similar FIG-aware applications.
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Read guide →Drag your .TIFF file from your computer or use the browse function.
Confirm .fig as the selected destination format.
Click "Convert" and download your converted .FIG file once ready.
TIFF files typically use the MIME type image/tiff and support multiple compression codecs including LZW and JPEG. FIG files use the MIME type application/x-xfig and are primarily used for vector graphics in engineering and academic settings. TIFF is widely supported across imaging software, whereas FIG files are handled by specialized drawing tools like Xfig.
The FIG (.FIG) format is commonly used for image. Understanding its characteristics can be helpful when converting to or from other formats like TIFF.
While specific technical details aren't available here, FIG files generally serve the purpose of storing image effectively within their domain.
Easily convert your high-quality TIFF images to FIG format using our online TIFF to FIG converter. This web-based tool allows you to transform files without any software downloads or complicated setups. Perfect for professionals and hobbyists alike, our solution ensures a smooth and fast conversion process.
TIFF is a raster image format known for high resolution and versatility in photography and publishing. FIG is a vector graphics format ideal for diagrams and technical drawings, offering scalability without loss of quality. While TIFF stores pixel-based images, FIG encodes vector information, making them suited for different purposes.
Keep original TIFFs under 50–100MB when possible for faster, more reliable conversion; very large TIFFs may require BigTIFF support or chunked processing.
To preserve visual fidelity, avoid aggressive downsampling and use high-quality embedding or a lossless intermediary (e.g., PNG) if FIG will reference external images.
For editable vector output, use automated tracing tools with manual cleanup; expect imperfect results for complex photos—line art and diagrams trace best.
For bulk workflows, batch convert by scripting the conversion tool or using a batch mode; convert multi-page TIFFs page-by-page if your FIG workflow supports single-page canvases.
The TIFF to FIG converter saved me hours on file preparation.
James R.
Engineer
Smooth and accurate conversion, very reliable tool.
Lisa M.
Architect
Perfect for converting technical images without losing detail.
Daniel K.
Researcher
Start your free TIFF to FIG conversion now.
Drag your file here to to upload.
Up to 250MB
Format limitation: FIG is primarily a vector/diagram format and may store raster data as embedded images or references; true raster metadata (TIFF tags, multiple channels like CMYK) may be lost or simplified during conversion.