CR2 to PBM Converter

Fast CR2 to PBM conversion — online and free

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Secure Processing

Uploaded Canon CR2 photos are erased right after conversion, and PBM results are auto-deleted within 24 hours. Your images remain confidential.

Any Device Works

Convert Canon CR2 to PBM from Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, or Android — the browser-based tool works identically on every platform.

No Signup Needed

Start converting CR2 to PBM immediately — no registration, no email verification. Open the page and upload your Canon photo to begin.

How to convert CR2 to PBM

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

CR2 (Canon RAW version 2) is Canon's second-generation proprietary RAW image format, introduced in 2004 with the EOS-1D Mark II and used across Canon's DSLR lineup until the transition to CR3 beginning in 2018. CR2 files use a TIFF-based container that stores the raw sensor data compressed with a lossless variant of JPEG encoding (Huffman-coded prediction residuals), keeping file sizes manageable while preserving every bit of the original capture. Each CR2 file contains multiple image sections: a small thumbnail, a mid-size preview JPEG suitable for quick review, and the full-resolution RAW data at 14-bit depth on most bodies. The format records extensive shooting metadata including Canon's proprietary tags for lens model, autofocus point selection, Picture Style settings, dust-delete data from the sensor cleaning reference shot, and per-body calibration information. One advantage is the vast software ecosystem — CR2 is one of the most widely supported RAW formats in existence, handled natively by Adobe Lightroom, Capture One, DxO, RawTherapee, darktable, and dozens of other converters and viewers, owing to Canon's dominant market share during the DSLR era. Reliable archival longevity is another key strength: the TIFF-based structure and well-documented layout make CR2 files relatively straightforward to parse even with custom tools, and the format's ubiquity means archival support will persist for decades.
Developer: Canon
Initial release: 2004
PBM (Portable Bitmap) is the monochrome (black and white, 1-bit) member of the Netpbm family of image formats, created by Jef Poskanzer in 1988 as part of the Pbmplus toolkit for Unix systems. The format exists in two variants: ASCII (magic number P1), where each pixel is represented as a text character '0' (white) or '1' (black) separated by whitespace, and binary (magic number P4), where pixels are packed eight per byte for compact storage. Both variants begin with a plain-text header specifying the magic number, image width and height, and optional comments. PBM was designed as the simplest possible image format — a bridge format for converting between the many incompatible raster formats that proliferated across different Unix systems and applications during the 1980s. The Netpbm philosophy was to convert any source format to PBM/PGM/PPM as an intermediate step, then convert to the target format, using the portable formats as a universal exchange layer. One advantage is extreme simplicity — the ASCII variant can be literally typed by hand in a text editor, and both variants are trivial to parse and generate in any programming language without external libraries. The format's role as a universal image processing intermediate is another strength: hundreds of Netpbm command-line tools accept PBM input, enabling complex image manipulation pipelines through Unix pipes. PBM remains used in computer science education, OCR preprocessing, and any context where a dead-simple monochrome image representation is needed.
Developer: Jef Poskanzer
Initial release: 1988

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert CR2 to PBM?

PBM is a simple, portable image format from the Netpbm family — easy to parse and widely used in image processing scripts and Unix toolchains.

What programs open PBM?

Open PBM with GIMP, IrfanView, XnView, and Unix/Linux image tools — it works across platforms.

Will my CR2 metadata (EXIF) be preserved?

Metadata handling depends on the target format. Where PBM supports it, camera data like shooting parameters and GPS coordinates can be retained.

Do I need to install software?

No installation required. The CR2 to PBM converter runs entirely in your web browser — just upload, convert, and download the result.

Do I need to register to convert CR2 to PBM?

No account is required. You can convert CR2 to PBM directly without signing up — just upload, convert, and download.