SFD to BMP Converter

Create uncompressed bitmap font specimens from SFD sources

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Lossless Quality

BMP preserves every pixel without compression artifacts, making it the right choice when you need pixel-perfect renderings of your SFD font glyphs.

Browser Conversion

Upload your SFD and get a BMP back — all in the browser. No FontForge or image editing software required on your machine.

Quick Processing

Even large SFD projects with hundreds of glyphs are rendered to BMP within seconds on Convertio cloud infrastructure.

How to convert SFD to BMP

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

SFD (SplineFont Database) is the native source file format of FontForge, the free and open-source font editor originally created by George Williams in 2000 under the name PfaEdit. The format stores a complete font project — glyph outlines (cubic and quadratic splines), advance widths, side bearings, hinting instructions, kerning and OpenType feature tables, naming records, and metadata — in a single human-readable text file. Each glyph is described by its Unicode code point, outline coordinates, reference composites, and anchors, making the entire font design inspectable and diffable with standard text tools. SFD functions as the editable working format during font development, from which finished fonts are compiled to binary formats like OTF, TTF, or WOFF. A primary advantage is version control friendliness — because SFD is plain text, font designers can track changes to individual glyphs, merge contributions from collaborators, and maintain full revision history using Git or any other VCS. The format's completeness is another strength: it preserves every piece of data that FontForge can represent, including TrueType instructions, contextual substitution lookups, and multiple master axes, avoiding round-trip data loss during editing. The SFD specification is publicly documented and has evolved through several versions. FontForge's widespread adoption in the open-source type design community means SFD serves as the source format for hundreds of freely licensed font families distributed worldwide.
Developer: George Williams
Initial release: November 7, 2000
BMP (Bitmap) is a raster image file format developed by Microsoft for the Windows operating system, introduced with Windows 3.0 in 1990. The format stores pixel data in a straightforward structure: a file header specifying dimensions, color depth, and compression method, followed by an optional color palette and then the raw pixel array. BMP supports color depths from 1-bit monochrome through 4-bit and 8-bit indexed color to 16-bit, 24-bit true color, and 32-bit with alpha channel. Most BMP files store pixels uncompressed (BI_RGB), though optional RLE compression is available for 4-bit and 8-bit modes. Pixels are arranged in bottom-up row order by default, with each row padded to a 4-byte boundary. One advantage is absolute simplicity — the format has no complex encoding, filtering, or compression layers, making BMP files trivial to read and write programmatically in any language. This simplicity also means BMP images render with zero decoding overhead, useful in scenarios where decompression latency matters. The format's deep Windows integration is another strength: BMP is the native bitmap format for Windows GDI, clipboard operations, and device-independent bitmap (DIB) handling, ensuring first-class support across the entire Windows ecosystem. While BMP's lack of compression produces large files unsuitable for web use or storage-constrained environments, it remains widely used as an intermediate format in image processing, as a clipboard exchange format, and in embedded systems where decoding simplicity outweighs file size.
Developer: Microsoft
Initial release: 1990

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SFD to BMP?

BMP stores pixel data without compression, giving you a lossless font preview image. Useful for documentation where every pixel must be exact.

How do I open a BMP file?

Windows, macOS, and Linux all open BMP natively. Paint, Preview, GIMP, and virtually every image editor supports the format without plugins.

Are BMP files large?

Yes — BMP is uncompressed, so file sizes are bigger than JPG or PNG. Choose BMP when lossless accuracy matters more than file size.

Can I convert several SFD files?

Upload multiple SFD files at once and each will be rendered into its own BMP preview image in a single batch.

Is this service free?

Convertio offers free SFD to BMP conversion online — no account creation or software installation needed.

SFD to BMP Quality Rating

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