CID to JFIF Converter

Render CID font glyphs in JFIF interchange image format online

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Maximum Compatibility

JFIF standardized header ensures your CID font glyph images display correctly across every device, browser, and operating system.

CID to Standard JPEG

Transform your CID-keyed CJK font characters into the JFIF interchange format — the most portable JPEG profile available.

Cloud-Based Rendering

Rendering runs on Convertio servers. Convert even large CJK CID fonts without any load on your local device.

How to convert CID to JFIF

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

CID (Character Identifier) is a font architecture developed by Adobe Systems and specified in June 1993 to address the challenges of fonts containing very large glyph sets, particularly for CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) scripts. Traditional PostScript fonts identify glyphs by name, which becomes impractical when a font contains tens of thousands of characters — a typical Japanese font may include over 20,000 glyphs. CID-keyed fonts replace glyph names with numeric identifiers organized by a character collection and ordering (such as Adobe-Japan1 or Adobe-GB1), dramatically reducing overhead for glyph access and subsetting. The architecture defines three PostScript font types: Type 9 (CID-keyed Type 1 outlines), Type 10 (CID-keyed Type 3), and Type 11 (CID-keyed Type 42/TrueType). A primary advantage is efficient handling of massive character sets — the numeric CID approach eliminates the memory and processing cost of maintaining thousands of glyph name strings. CID fonts also support sophisticated CMap resources that map encoding values to CIDs, enabling a single font to serve multiple encoding schemes (Unicode, Shift-JIS, Big5) without duplicating glyph data. The architecture integrates well with PDF subsetting, allowing documents to embed only the glyphs actually used. CID-keyed technology laid the foundation for CJK support in both OpenType and modern PDF workflows, and remains active in print production and document processing systems worldwide.
Developer: Adobe Systems
Initial release: June 11, 1993
JFIF (JPEG File Interchange Format) is the standard file format specification for storing JPEG-compressed images, published by Eric Hamilton at C-Cube Microsystems in version 1.0 in 1991 and updated to version 1.02 in 1992. While the JPEG standard (ISO/IEC 10918-1) defines the compression algorithm — the discrete cosine transform, quantization, and entropy coding that convert pixel data into a compact bitstream — it does not specify a file format. JFIF fills this gap by defining a minimal container that wraps the JPEG bitstream with the metadata needed for interoperable display: pixel aspect ratio, resolution units (DPI or dots per centimeter), color space specification (YCbCr using CCIR 601 conversion from RGB), and an optional embedded thumbnail. The JFIF container is identified by an APP0 marker segment at the start of the file containing the ASCII string 'JFIF' and a version number. Nearly every JPEG file in existence conforms to the JFIF specification — when people refer to a 'JPEG file,' they almost always mean a JFIF file, even if the extension is .jpg or .jpeg. One advantage is universality: JFIF's simplicity and early publication date (predating competing proposals like EXIF) meant it was adopted by virtually every software and hardware platform as the baseline JPEG file format, establishing the interoperability that made JPEG the world's most widely used image format. The specification's deliberate minimalism is another strength — by defining only the essential metadata for correct display and leaving room for application-specific extensions via additional APP markers, JFIF proved extensible enough to accommodate EXIF camera data, ICC color profiles, and XMP metadata without breaking backward compatibility.
Initial release: 1991

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert CID to JFIF?

JFIF is the interchange profile of JPEG — ensuring maximum compatibility. CID font glyph images in JFIF display correctly everywhere.

How do I view JFIF images?

Every browser, phone, and image editor displays JFIF. It is technically identical to standard JPEG with an interchange-compliant header.

Is JFIF better than regular JPEG?

JFIF adds a standardized header that ensures color space and aspect ratio information travels with the image — improving cross-platform consistency.

Can I control compression?

Convertio lets you adjust the quality slider before converting. Balance between smaller file sizes and sharper CJK glyph rendering.

Is this free on Convertio?

Yes — CID to JFIF is completely free. No signup, no payment, no software to install.