HTML to SGI Converter

Render web pages as SGI images — free online converter

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Production Quality

SGI is trusted across VFX and animation studios — your HTML page capture becomes a production-grade image asset.

Server-Side Rendering

Convertio servers handle all page rendering and SGI encoding remotely — nothing runs on your local machine.

Cross-Platform Access

Convert any web page to SGI from a browser on any device — no Silicon Graphics hardware or Unix workstation needed.

How to convert HTML to SGI

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

HTML (HyperText Markup Language) is the standard markup language for creating web pages, originally conceived by Tim Berners-Lee at CERN in 1991 and later standardized by the W3C and WHATWG. HTML structures content using a system of nested tags that define headings, paragraphs, lists, links, images, tables, forms, and multimedia elements, with CSS handling visual presentation and JavaScript adding interactivity. The language has evolved through major versions — HTML 2.0 (1995), HTML 4.01 (1999), XHTML 1.0 (2000), and the current HTML Living Standard (evolved from HTML5, published 2014) — each expanding semantic vocabulary and capabilities. HTML documents are plain text files interpretable by any web browser, and the language's role extends beyond websites: email formatting, ebook content (EPUB), application interfaces (Electron, Cordova), and document export all rely on HTML. One advantage is universal rendering — every computing device with a browser displays HTML content, making it the most widely supported document format in existence. The semantic markup model provides another strength: elements like <article>, <nav>, <aside>, and <figure> carry meaning that benefits accessibility tools, search engine indexing, and content reuse. The open, W3C/WHATWG-governed specification ensures vendor independence, and HTML's text-based nature means documents are trivially created, inspected, and processed with any programming language.
Initial release: 1993
SGI is the generic file extension for the Silicon Graphics Image format, also referred to by channel-specific extensions .rgb (3 channels), .rgba (4 channels), .bw (grayscale), and .int/.inta (16-bit variants). Developed by Silicon Graphics around 1986 for their IRIX operating system, the SGI format uses a 512-byte header followed by planar image data, where each color channel is stored as a complete plane rather than interleaved with other channels at each pixel. The header specifies a magic number (474), compression mode (0 for verbatim, 1 for RLE), bytes per channel (1 or 2), dimensionality (1 for scanline, 2 for image, 3 for multi-channel image), channel dimensions, pixel value range, and an 80-character image name. For RLE-compressed images, a table of offsets and lengths follows the header, allowing random access to individual scanlines without sequential decompression. Silicon Graphics workstations were the backbone of Hollywood visual effects, scientific visualization, flight simulation, and CAD/CAM industries throughout the 1990s, and the SGI format was the standard working format across these domains. One advantage is the format's robust design: the combination of scanline-addressable RLE compression, multi-channel support, 16-bit depth capability, and planar layout made it equally suitable for quick preview display and production rendering output. The format's association with the golden age of SGI-powered visual effects is another notable aspect — SGI files from this era represent production assets from landmark films and scientific visualizations. SGI images are supported by ImageMagick, GIMP, XnView, Photoshop (via plugin), and various 3D rendering and compositing applications.
Developer: Silicon Graphics
Initial release: 1986

Frequently Asked Questions

Why save a web page as SGI?

SGI is a staple in professional VFX and 3D pipelines — capturing a webpage as SGI feeds it directly into production workflows.

Can I convert a live URL to SGI?

Absolutely — paste any public web address and Convertio renders the page on its servers, then outputs an SGI image.

What programs read SGI images?

Photoshop, GIMP, IrfanView, and industry tools like Maya and Nuke all handle SGI files without trouble.

Does SGI compress the output?

SGI supports optional RLE compression — the image stays compact while retaining full visual fidelity from the render.

Is this converter free to use?

Yes — HTML to SGI conversion is completely free on Convertio. Premium plans add batch mode and priority queues.

Are uploaded pages kept private?

Uploaded content is deleted after conversion, and SGI outputs are automatically removed from servers within 24 hours.

HTML to SGI Quality Rating

3.8 (2 votes)
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