DCR to PS Converter

Convert DCR to PS — no software required

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Professional Privacy

DCR uploads from Kodak pro cameras are deleted immediately after conversion. Output files are automatically removed within 24 hours.

Streamlined Process

Upload DCR, select output format, download. Three steps transform your Kodak professional photos into modern formats.

Kodak Color Science

DCR files carry the distinctive Kodak color profile. The converter preserves this character while transforming to your target format.

How to convert DCR to PS

1

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

2

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

3

Let the file convert and you can download your ps 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
PS is the standard extension for files written in PostScript, the page description language created by Adobe Systems and first shipped in 1984 with the Apple LaserWriter. A PostScript file is a complete program that describes the precise appearance of a page — text, vector graphics, curves, fills, and even embedded raster images — using a stack-based interpreted language with full programming constructs. When sent to a PostScript-compatible printer or interpreter (such as Ghostscript), the program executes and produces rendered output. PostScript introduced cubic Bezier curves as the standard representation for smooth outlines, a mathematical model that became the foundation for virtually all subsequent vector graphics and font technology including PDF, SVG, and OpenType. The language also serves as a font format: Type 1 PostScript fonts encode glyph outlines as PostScript programs with hinting instructions for sharp rendering at low resolutions, while Type 3 fonts use the full language to define arbitrarily complex glyphs. One advantage is device independence — a PostScript file produces identical output whether rendered on a 300 dpi desktop printer, a high-resolution imagesetter, or a software rasterizer, because it describes shapes mathematically rather than as pixel grids. The human-readable text format provides another practical strength: PS files can be inspected, debugged, and modified with any text editor, and they can be generated programmatically by any software without requiring specialized libraries. PostScript files are widely handled by Ghostscript, Adobe Acrobat, preview applications, and numerous publishing and graphics tools.
Developer: Adobe Systems
Initial release: 1984

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DCR to PS?

DCR is a Kodak RAW variant used in their professional cameras — now discontinued. Converting to PS preserves your high-quality captures in a current format.

What opens PS?

Ghostscript, Adobe Acrobat Distiller, GSview, and PostScript-compatible printers handle PS files.

Will DCR convert to true vector in PS?

The converter traces your DCR raster image into PS vector format. Results vary by image complexity — simpler images vectorize better.

Does this work on Mac and Windows?

Yes — the converter runs in any web browser on any operating system. macOS, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS — all work equally well.

Is DCR to PS conversion free?

Standard conversions are available at no cost. Premium plans add faster processing and higher limits for professional-volume work.