SFD to FTS Converter

Export FontForge fonts as FITS images for scientific use

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Scientific Standard

FITS is the universal data format for astronomy. Converting SFD to FTS lets you work with font renderings in scientific image pipelines.

Cloud Rendering

No local tools needed. Convertio handles SFD to FTS conversion on its servers, accessible from any device with a browser.

Secure Uploads

Your SFD font sources are deleted after conversion and FTS results are purged within 24 hours to protect your data.

How to convert SFD to FTS

1

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

2

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

3

Let the file convert and you can download your fts 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
FTS is a file extension for the Flexible Image Transport System (FITS), the standard data format used in astronomy since 1981 when it was defined by Don Wells, Eric Greisen, and R.H. Harten at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, and subsequently endorsed by the International Astronomical Union in 1982. FITS was designed from the outset as a self-describing archival format: each file begins with one or more 2880-byte header blocks containing ASCII keyword-value pairs that describe the data's dimensions, coordinate system, observation parameters, and provenance, followed by data blocks in a variety of numeric types — 8/16/32/64-bit integers and 32/64-bit IEEE floating-point values. FITS supports multi-dimensional arrays (images, data cubes, hypercubes), binary tables for catalog data, and ASCII tables, with multiple Header/Data Units (HDUs) that can coexist in a single file. The format handles specialized astronomical data: spectral cubes, radio interferometry visibilities, multi-extension mosaic images from CCD arrays, and time-series photometry. One advantage is scientific rigor: FITS mandates that all metadata needed to interpret the data physically — coordinate transformations (WCS), photometric calibration, telescope and instrument parameters — travels with the file, eliminating the metadata-loss problem that plagues general-purpose image formats in scientific contexts. The format's longevity and institutional backing is another strength — virtually every observatory, space telescope (Hubble, James Webb, Chandra), and astronomical software package (DS9, IRAF, Astropy) uses FITS as its primary data format.
Developer: NASA / IAU
Initial release: 1981

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SFD to FTS?

FITS is the standard for scientific image data in astronomy and research. Convert SFD to FTS for embedding font renderings in scientific analysis tools.

How do I open an FTS file?

Open FTS in DS9, FITS Liberator, Aladin, or any astronomical image viewer. Python libraries like astropy can also read FITS data programmatically.

Does FTS store metadata?

Yes, FITS headers can carry rich metadata alongside the image data — resolution, origin, and custom key-value pairs.

Is FTS a common image format?

Outside of astronomy and scientific research, FTS is uncommon. For general use, PNG or TIFF would be more practical alternatives.

Is the conversion free?

Convertio offers free SFD to FTS conversion online — no sign-up, no software, just upload and download.