RGBO to SK1 Converter

Turn RGBO into SK1 vector output online

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Quality Preserved

Your original RGBO visual data transfers cleanly to SK1 format. The converter maps pixel content accurately without unnecessary loss.

Easy to Use

Converting RGBO to SK1 takes just a few clicks. The clean interface guides you through uploading, choosing output, and downloading.

Privacy First

Convertio automatically deletes uploaded RGBO files after processing and purges SK1 results within 24 hours. Your data stays yours.

How to convert RGBO to SK1

1

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

2

Choose sk1 or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your sk1 file right afterwards

About formats

RGBO is a raw pixel data format designation used by ImageMagick, the open-source image processing suite first released in 1990, representing images as a flat sequence of Red, Green, Blue, and Opacity (inverted alpha) sample values with no header, container, or compression. The RGBO channel ordering specifies that the fourth channel is opacity rather than alpha — where alpha represents transparency (0 = transparent, max = opaque), opacity represents the inverse (0 = opaque, max = transparent). This distinction matters in compositing pipelines where the mathematical convention for the fourth channel varies between systems: some compositing models work with alpha (transparency), while older conventions including portions of ImageMagick's internal processing historically used opacity. RGBO files contain raw sample data at a user-specified bit depth (8-bit, 16-bit, or floating-point per channel), with pixels stored in scanline order. Because there is no header, the image dimensions, bit depth, and endianness must be specified externally when reading the file — typically via ImageMagick command-line arguments. One advantage is direct compatibility with processing pipelines that use the opacity convention: RGBO eliminates the need for channel inversion when interfacing with systems that expect opacity rather than alpha, preventing subtle compositing errors that occur when transparency conventions are mixed. The format's raw-data nature provides another practical benefit — with no encoding overhead, RGBO data can be memory-mapped, processed with SIMD instructions, or piped between processes with minimal latency. RGBO is primarily used within ImageMagick processing chains and can be converted to any other format using ImageMagick's extensive format support.
Initial release: 1990
SK1 is the native file format of the sK1 project, an open-source vector graphics editor and conversion engine started by Igor Novikov in 2003 as a successor to Bernhard Herzog's Skencil. The format evolved from the original SK format, extending its capabilities while maintaining the text-based, Python-readable syntax for describing vector documents. SK1 files encode complete document structures including multiple pages, layers, guidelines, and a full hierarchy of graphic objects — Bezier paths, rectangles, circles, polygons, text blocks, and embedded raster images — with attributes for fills (solid, gradient, pattern, hatching), strokes, and transformations. The sK1 project distinguished itself by focusing on prepress and professional print production features, adding CMYK color management, ICC color profiles, spot color support, and PDF/PostScript output — capabilities unusual in open-source vector editors. One advantage is professional color handling — sK1's CMYK workflows and color management make it one of the few open-source tools suitable for print-ready vector production. The project's companion tool, UniConvertor, leverages the SK1 format as an intermediate representation for converting between numerous vector formats (CDR, CMX, WMF, EMF, SVG, and others), giving SK1 significance beyond the editor itself as a universal interchange format. The text-based file structure preserves the readability and scriptability advantages inherited from Skencil's original SK format.
Initial release: 2003

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert RGBO to SK1?

Raw RGBO data lacks compression and file headers, making it unviewable in standard tools. SK1 provides a structured, widely supported alternative.

What programs open SK1 files?

SK1 files can be opened in sK1 illustration program, UniConvertor, and open-source vector graphics applications.

Is RGBO to SK1 conversion lossless?

The pixel data from your RGBO source is mapped faithfully to SK1. Whether the result is lossless depends on the SK1 format's compression method.

Why output to SK1 format?

SK1 provides open-source vector, prepress support, cross-platform. Converting RGBO data into SK1 format opens up professional design and print possibilities.

What platforms support this converter?

Convertio runs in any modern web browser — Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge — on Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, and iOS devices.

Is my RGBO data safe during conversion?

Yes — uploaded data is processed securely and deleted immediately after conversion. Output files are removed from servers within 24 hours.