DCR to HEIF Converter

DCR to HEIF — convert online in seconds

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Server-Side Rendering

All DCR processing happens in the cloud. Your computer contributes zero resources — perfect for handling multiple files.

Archive Migration

Migrate your complete DCR photo archive in bulk. Upload everything at once and let the converter handle each file.

Rapid Conversion

DCR files are processed efficiently on optimized servers. Most conversions finish in seconds, delivering fast professional results.

How to convert DCR to HEIF

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

DCR is a proprietary RAW image format developed by Eastman Kodak for their DCS (Digital Camera System) line of professional digital cameras. Introduced in the early 2000s with cameras like the DCS Pro Back and DCS Pro SLR/n, the DCR format captures unprocessed data from Kodak's full-frame CMOS and CCD sensors at 12 to 14 bits per channel, preserving the complete tonal range and color information before any demosaicing, white balance, or tone curve processing is applied. Kodak's DCS cameras occupied a significant niche in professional photojournalism and studio work during the early digital transition, and DCR files from this era represent an important corpus of professional digital imagery. The format stores sensor data alongside Kodak-specific metadata including color matrix coefficients, analogue gain settings, and proprietary noise reduction parameters tailored to each sensor variant. One advantage of DCR is the distinctive color rendering that Kodak's sensor technology and color science produce — many photographers and retouchers consider the tonality of Kodak DCS captures, particularly skin tones and highlight roll-off, to be uniquely pleasing, a characteristic preserved in the RAW data and adjustable during post-processing. Legacy compatibility is another practical strength: despite Kodak's exit from the camera market, DCR files remain supported by Adobe Lightroom, Adobe Camera Raw, dcraw, and RawTherapee, ensuring these early professional digital negatives remain fully accessible for reprocessing with modern algorithms.
Developer: Eastman Kodak
Initial release: 2001
HEIF (High Efficiency Image File Format) is a container format for images and image sequences standardized by the Moving Picture Experts Group as ISO/IEC 23008-12, first published in 2015. HEIF is built on the ISO Base Media File Format (ISOBMFF, the same container used for MP4 video), providing a flexible structure that can hold single images, image collections, image sequences (like animations or bursts), and derived images with non-destructive editing operations. The container is codec-agnostic — while the most common implementation pairs HEIF with HEVC/H.265 compression (branded as HEIC by Apple), the standard also accommodates AV1 compression (creating the AVIF variant), H.266/VVC, and other future codecs. HEIF supports features that JPEG lacks: 10-bit and 12-bit color depth, wide color gamuts (Display P3, BT.2020), lossless compression, alpha transparency, depth maps, thumbnail images, and Exif/XMP metadata — all within a single file. Auxiliary image items can store computational photography data like depth maps, HDR gain maps, and semantic segmentation masks. One advantage is the format's future-proof architecture: by separating the container from the codec, HEIF can adopt newer, more efficient compression technologies without changing the file structure, metadata handling, or application-level APIs. The substantial compression improvement over JPEG is another core strength — HEVC-based HEIF typically achieves 40-50% file size reduction compared to JPEG at the same visual quality, beneficial for storage and bandwidth. HEIF is supported by Apple's ecosystem (iOS, macOS), Windows 10/11, Android 10+, GIMP, ImageMagick, and Adobe products.
Initial release: 2015

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DCR to HEIF?

Kodak no longer manufactures cameras, and DCR format support is drying up. Converting to HEIF ensures your professional Kodak shots stay accessible.

What opens HEIF?

Apple devices, modern Android, Windows with HEIF extension, and GIMP 2.10+ open HEIF images.

Does conversion lose image quality?

Some quality depends on the target format. HEIF uses HEVC compressed encoding, so results reflect the characteristics of HEIF output.

Can I convert DCR to HEIF on my phone?

Absolutely. The converter works in any mobile browser — iOS Safari, Android Chrome, or any other. No app installation necessary.

Is it free to convert DCR to HEIF?

Basic DCR to HEIF conversions are free. Paid plans unlock priority processing and expanded capabilities for heavy users.