CID to JP2 Converter

Render CID font glyphs as JPEG 2000 images with wavelet compression

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Wavelet Compression

JP2 wavelet encoding preserves fine CJK stroke details better than traditional JPEG, producing cleaner glyph renders at smaller file sizes.

Cloud Rendering

Rasterization and compression run on Convertio servers — no heavy lifting on your device, even for CID fonts with thousands of characters.

CID Glyphs to JP2

Transform your CID-keyed font characters into high-quality JPEG 2000 images for archival, documentation, or digital asset management.

How to convert CID to JP2

1

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

2

Choose jp2 or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your jp2 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
JP2 (JPEG 2000 Part 1) is an image format based on the JPEG 2000 compression standard, developed by the Joint Photographic Experts Group and published as ISO/IEC 15444-1 in December 2000 as the successor to the original JPEG standard. Unlike JPEG's block-based discrete cosine transform, JPEG 2000 uses discrete wavelet transform (DWT) compression, which eliminates the characteristic 8x8 block artifacts visible in highly compressed JPEG images and instead produces a smooth, gradual quality degradation. The format supports both lossy and lossless compression within the same codestream, along with features absent from original JPEG: 16-bit and higher bit-depth images, arbitrary numbers of color channels, alpha transparency, region-of-interest coding (allocating more bits to important areas), and progressive quality or resolution refinement from a single compressed stream. One advantage is superior image quality at low bit rates — JPEG 2000 produces visibly cleaner images than JPEG at equivalent file sizes, particularly below 0.5 bits per pixel where JPEG exhibits severe blocking. The progressive decoding capability is another strength: a single JP2 file can be decoded at any resolution or quality level without encoding multiple versions, valuable for remote sensing and medical imaging where the same image must serve both thumbnail browsing and full-resolution analysis. JP2 is the mandated format for digital cinema (DCI), the preferred format in geospatial data (GeoJP2), and widely adopted in cultural heritage digitization.
Initial release: December 2000

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert CID to JP2?

JPEG 2000 provides superior compression with optional lossless mode — ideal for archival-quality renderings of CJK font specimens and glyph catalogs.

How do I view JP2 images?

IrfanView, XnView, GIMP, and macOS Preview open JP2 natively. Many browsers also support JPEG 2000 through plugins or native rendering.

Is JP2 better than regular JPG?

JP2 uses wavelet compression that avoids blocking artifacts. At equivalent file sizes, JPEG 2000 preserves finer details in glyph strokes.

Can I get lossless JP2 output?

JPEG 2000 supports both lossy and lossless modes. For pixel-perfect CJK glyph archival, lossless JP2 retains every detail.

Is CID to JP2 free?

Yes — Convertio handles this conversion entirely free of charge, with no registration or software installation needed.