BIN to HDR Converter

Produce Radiance HDR images from MacBinary font data

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Wide Dynamic Range

HDR captures luminance beyond standard imaging limits. BIN to HDR conversion produces output suitable for professional 3D and VFX.

Server Processing

Convertio handles BIN to HDR rendering in the cloud. No local processing power needed — results arrive fast from remote servers.

Zero Setup

No downloads, no accounts. The BIN to HDR converter is ready to use the moment you visit Convertio in any browser.

How to convert BIN to HDR

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose hdr or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your hdr file right afterwards

About formats

BIN refers to MacBinary-encoded font files, a transfer format that preserves classic Macintosh file system features when moving data across platforms. Classic Mac OS stored fonts using the resource fork — a secondary data stream invisible to non-Mac systems — which meant that simply copying a Mac font to a Windows PC or Unix server would strip the actual font data entirely. MacBinary solves this by combining both the data fork and resource fork into a single flat file with a 128-byte header containing the original HFS metadata. In the font context, BIN files typically wrap TrueType suitcase fonts, PostScript Type 1 LWFN outline files, or bitmap NFNT font resources. The format was first specified in 1985 by Dennis Brothers and collaborators from the early Mac community, with MacBinary II following around 1987 and MacBinary III arriving in 1996 to support longer filenames. A key advantage is lossless preservation: every byte of the original Mac font file survives intact through email, FTP, or cross-platform file sharing, including creator and type codes that identify the font format. The single-file packaging is another practical strength — rather than dealing with separate data and resource streams, users and automated systems handle one portable container. Although modern macOS has moved away from resource forks and Mac fonts now typically ship as OTF, TTF, or DFONT files, BIN remains important for accessing archived font collections from the classic Mac era.
Developer: Dennis Brothers
Initial release: 1985
HDR (also known as RGBE or Radiance HDR) is a high-dynamic-range image format created by Greg Ward Larson as part of the Radiance) lighting simulation system, developed at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory starting in 1985 with the HDR format emerging around 1989. The format stores floating-point RGB pixel values using a compact 32-bit-per-pixel encoding called RGBE (Red, Green, Blue, Exponent): three 8-bit mantissa bytes share a single 8-bit exponent, representing luminance values across a range of roughly 76 orders of magnitude while keeping file sizes comparable to standard 24-bit images. HDR files begin with a text header containing rendering and exposure metadata, followed by the RGBE pixel data compressed with a scanline-oriented run-length encoding scheme. The format captures the full luminance range of real-world scenes — from deep shadows to direct sunlight — enabling physically accurate lighting calculations, tone mapping to different display conditions, and post-capture exposure adjustment without the clipping artifacts inherent in 8-bit formats. One advantage is the format's foundational role in HDR imaging: Radiance HDR pioneered the concept of storing real-world luminance values in image files, and the .hdr format became the standard for light probe images and environment maps used in image-based lighting across the 3D rendering industry. The format's compact encoding is another practical strength — the RGBE scheme provides far more dynamic range than 8-bit formats while using only 33% more storage per pixel, a favorable tradeoff that made HDR practical on storage-limited systems of the late 1980s. HDR files are supported by Photoshop, GIMP, ImageMagick, Blender, and all major 3D renderers.
Developer: Greg Ward Larson
Initial release: 1989

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert BIN to HDR?

HDR images store lighting information with wide dynamic range. Converting BIN to HDR is useful for creating HDR environment textures.

How to open HDR files?

HDR files open in Photoshop, GIMP, Blender, and any application that supports Radiance RGBE format for HDR image editing.

What is HDR used for?

HDR images are used in 3D rendering for environment maps, in photography for tone mapping, and in lighting design applications.

Is BIN to HDR a common conversion?

It is niche but supported. Convertio handles the conversion seamlessly regardless of how specialized the format combination may be.

Does the converter cost anything?

BIN to HDR conversion is free on Convertio. No signup, no payment — just open the page and start converting.

BIN to HDR Quality Rating

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