ORF to RGB Converter

Change Olympus RAW photos to RGB format online

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Server-Side Processing

Conversion runs entirely on cloud servers, so your Olympus ORF to RGB transformation does not burden your local machine at all.

Many Formats

Your Olympus ORF can go to RGB and over a hundred other formats. Convertio handles a wide range of image, document, and vector conversions.

Browser-Based Tool

No apps or plugins to install. Your Olympus ORF to RGB conversion happens right in the browser — accessible from any modern device.

How to convert ORF to RGB

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

ORF (Olympus RAW Format) is the proprietary RAW image format used by Olympus (now OM Digital Solutions) digital cameras, introduced in 2000 with the E-10 digital SLR and continuing through the entire Micro Four Thirds OM-D and PEN lineups. ORF files capture the unprocessed 12-bit or 14-bit readout from the camera's Four Thirds or Micro Four Thirds Live MOS or CCD sensor, preserving the complete Bayer-pattern mosaic data before any demosaicing, noise reduction, or color processing. The format uses an Olympus-specific container that stores the raw data with lossless compression alongside multiple embedded JPEG previews, extensive EXIF metadata, and Olympus MakerNote tags encoding Art Filter settings, in-body image stabilization parameters, face/eye detection results, and computational photography mode information. ORF has evolved across several generations of Olympus sensors, from the original 4-megapixel Four Thirds CCD to the 20+ megapixel stacked sensors in current OM System bodies, and the format has accommodated these changes while maintaining backward compatibility in processing software. One advantage is the Micro Four Thirds system's depth-of-field characteristics: ORF files from these smaller sensors deliver greater depth of field at equivalent apertures compared to full-frame, a genuine advantage for macro, landscape, and travel photography where sharpness throughout the frame matters. Wide processing support is another strength — ORF files are handled by Adobe Lightroom, Capture One, DxO, Olympus/OM Workspace, dcraw, and RawTherapee.
Developer: Olympus
Initial release: 2000
RGB is a raw (headerless) image format that stores pixel data as a flat sequence of red, green, and blue sample values with no container structure, compression, or metadata. Each pixel is represented by three consecutive bytes (in 8-bit mode) — one for red intensity, one for green, and one for blue — written in scanline order from the top-left corner of the image to the bottom-right. Because there is no header, the image dimensions and bit depth must be specified externally when reading the file. The format supports multiple bit depths: 8-bit (0-255 per channel), 16-bit (0-65535 per channel), and floating-point variants, with 8-bit being the most common. The RGB color model itself reflects how display hardware produces color — by mixing red, green, and blue light at varying intensities — and raw RGB files represent this model in its most direct digital form. With 8-bit channels, three bytes per pixel yield a 24-bit color palette capable of representing 16,777,216 distinct colors. One advantage is zero-overhead processing: without headers or compression to parse, raw RGB data can be memory-mapped, fed directly into GPU textures, or piped between processing stages with minimal latency — valuable in real-time imaging, scientific instrumentation, and computer vision pipelines where every millisecond matters. The format's universal simplicity provides another practical strength — any programming language can read or write raw pixel data with just basic file I/O, making it a reliable interchange format between custom software that may not share support for structured image containers. Raw RGB files are handled by ImageMagick, FFmpeg, and various scientific and graphics tools.
Initial release: 1990

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert ORF to RGB?

Raw pixel formats like RGB provide direct access to color channel data — ideal for scientific analysis or custom processing of your ORF captures.

What programs open RGB?

Programs that handle RGB include GIMP, Photoshop, IrfanView, and image processing tools that handle raw pixel data.

Does this work with all Olympus cameras?

The converter supports ORF from all Olympus camera models — whether you shoot with an entry-level body or a professional flagship.

How long does the conversion take?

Most ORF to RGB conversions finish in seconds. Processing time depends on image resolution and server load, but results are typically fast.

Does the conversion preserve image quality?

The converter processes your Olympus ORF sensor data carefully to produce the best possible RGB output. Quality depends on the target format's capabilities.

Can I convert ORF from Google Drive?

Yes — import Olympus ORF photos directly from Google Drive or Dropbox without downloading them to your device first. Cloud-to-cloud workflow.

ORF to RGB Quality Rating

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