DFONT to JFI Converter

Render Mac DFONT glyph previews as JFI images online

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Extension Specific

Get your DFONT font render in the exact .jfi extension your system expects — no renaming, no compatibility workarounds needed.

Works Everywhere

JFI contains standard JPEG data viewable on every device and platform. Your DFONT glyph specimen is universally accessible despite the niche extension.

Cloud Powered

All rendering and encoding happens remotely on our servers. No macOS or image tools needed — just a browser and your DFONT file.

How to convert DFONT to JFI

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

DFONT (Data Fork TrueType) is a font file format introduced by Apple with Mac OS X 10.0 in March 2001, created to solve a fundamental compatibility problem in the transition from classic Mac OS to the Unix-based OS X architecture. Classic Mac fonts stored glyph data in the resource fork — a secondary file stream specific to the HFS file system — but OS X's Unix foundation and its use of UFS had no native resource fork support. DFONT relocates the entire resource fork structure into the data fork, wrapping the same TrueType font tables in a resource map that standard OS X typography APIs can read. The file is essentially a resource-fork-less TrueType suitcase. Apple bundled DFONT as the default format for system fonts shipped with OS X, and it remains present in macOS system directories. One advantage is seamless backward compatibility with Apple's existing font rendering stack — the internal structure mirrors classic resource-fork fonts, so CoreText and its predecessors handle DFONTs without any special conversion path. The single-fork design is another practical strength, ensuring that DFONT files survive intact when stored on non-HFS volumes, transferred over networks, or managed by version control systems. While Apple has increasingly moved toward OpenType (.otf/.ttc) for newer system fonts, DFONT files continue to appear in macOS installations and in font collections originating from the OS X era.
Developer: Apple Computer
Initial release: 2001
JFI is an alternate file extension for images stored in the JPEG File Interchange Format (JFIF), the standard file format for JPEG-compressed photographic images. JFI files are byte-identical to standard JPEG files — the extension is simply a less common variant that some early applications and operating systems used to identify JPEG/JFIF images. The underlying JFIF specification, published by Eric Hamilton at C-Cube Microsystems in 1991, defines how JPEG-compressed image data is packaged into a file with specific marker segments: an SOI (Start of Image) marker, an APP0 marker containing the JFIF identifier string, version number, pixel density information, and optional thumbnail, followed by the JPEG data stream comprising quantization tables, Huffman tables, and the entropy-coded scan data. JFI files support 8-bit grayscale and 24-bit YCbCr color images at any resolution, with quality controlled by the quantization table values selected during compression. The lossy DCT-based compression achieves typical ratios of 10:1 to 20:1 for photographic content with minimal visible artifacts, though higher compression introduces the characteristic blocking and ringing patterns associated with JPEG. One advantage of the JFI/JFIF specification is its universal interoperability: by standardizing the file structure and color space conventions (YCbCr with specific CCIR 601 conversion coefficients), JFIF ensured that JPEG images could be exchanged between applications and platforms without color shifts or decoding failures. Complete software compatibility is another practical strength — JFI files open in every image viewer, browser, and editor ever made, since the content is standard JPEG data regardless of the file extension used.
Initial release: 1991

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert DFONT to JFI?

JFI is a JPEG variant with the .jfi extension, required by some legacy software. Converting DFONT produces glyph images in the exact file type your system needs.

How do I open a JFI file?

JFI opens in every JPEG-compatible application — all browsers, image viewers, and editors handle it. The extension differs from JPG, but the format is identical.

Can I rename JFI to JPG?

Yes — they are the same JPEG format. But converting directly to JFI from DFONT is cleaner than converting to JPG and manually renaming afterward.

Is JFI widely supported?

As JPEG data, JFI works everywhere. Some file managers may not show thumbnails for the .jfi extension, but opening the file in any viewer works perfectly.

Does the conversion cost anything?

No. Convertio converts DFONT to JFI completely free — online, in seconds, with no account or software needed.