SVG to HDR Converter

Convert SVG artwork to HDR high dynamic range images online

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Extended Dynamic Range

HDR captures luminance detail beyond what standard formats allow — gradients and highlights from your SVG are preserved with floating-point precision.

Production Workflow

Radiance HDR is a standard in 3D rendering and visual effects — your SVG assets become usable in professional compositing pipelines.

Server-Side Encoding

HDR encoding runs in the cloud so you get the output without installing Radiance tools or HDR processing software locally.

How to convert SVG to HDR

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) is an XML-based vector image format developed by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), with the 1.0 specification published as a Recommendation on September 4, 2001. Unlike binary vector formats, SVG describes shapes, paths, text, gradients, filters, and animations in human-readable XML markup that can be authored in a text editor, processed by scripting languages, and styled with CSS. The format supports both vector elements (lines, curves, polygons defined by mathematical coordinates) and embedded raster images, along with interactivity through JavaScript event handling and declarative animations via SMIL or CSS transitions. SVG is natively rendered by all modern web browsers without plugins, making it the standard format for resolution-independent graphics on the web — from icons and logos to interactive data visualizations and animated illustrations. A major advantage is infinite scalability: SVG graphics remain perfectly sharp on any display, from low-DPI monitors to ultra-high-resolution Retina screens, because rendering is computed from geometry rather than pixels. The text-based nature provides another core strength — SVG content is indexable by search engines, accessible to screen readers, and trivially manipulable via the DOM using standard web technologies. The active W3C specification continues to evolve with modern web platform capabilities, maintaining SVG's position as the essential vector format for responsive web design.
Developer: W3C
Initial release: September 4, 2001
HDR (also known as RGBE or Radiance HDR) is a high-dynamic-range image format created by Greg Ward Larson as part of the Radiance) lighting simulation system, developed at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory starting in 1985 with the HDR format emerging around 1989. The format stores floating-point RGB pixel values using a compact 32-bit-per-pixel encoding called RGBE (Red, Green, Blue, Exponent): three 8-bit mantissa bytes share a single 8-bit exponent, representing luminance values across a range of roughly 76 orders of magnitude while keeping file sizes comparable to standard 24-bit images. HDR files begin with a text header containing rendering and exposure metadata, followed by the RGBE pixel data compressed with a scanline-oriented run-length encoding scheme. The format captures the full luminance range of real-world scenes — from deep shadows to direct sunlight — enabling physically accurate lighting calculations, tone mapping to different display conditions, and post-capture exposure adjustment without the clipping artifacts inherent in 8-bit formats. One advantage is the format's foundational role in HDR imaging: Radiance HDR pioneered the concept of storing real-world luminance values in image files, and the .hdr format became the standard for light probe images and environment maps used in image-based lighting across the 3D rendering industry. The format's compact encoding is another practical strength — the RGBE scheme provides far more dynamic range than 8-bit formats while using only 33% more storage per pixel, a favorable tradeoff that made HDR practical on storage-limited systems of the late 1980s. HDR files are supported by Photoshop, GIMP, ImageMagick, Blender, and all major 3D renderers.
Developer: Greg Ward Larson
Initial release: 1989

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert SVG to HDR?

HDR stores extended luminance ranges beyond standard 8-bit — useful for lighting maps, environment probes, and VFX compositing with SVG-based assets.

What opens HDR files?

Photoshop, GIMP, Blender, Luminance HDR, and 3D renderers like V-Ray and Arnold all support Radiance HDR images natively.

Does HDR add extra detail?

HDR expands the dynamic range representation of your SVG colors — particularly useful for preserving subtle gradients and extreme contrast ratios.

Is HDR useful for web graphics?

HDR is primarily a production format for 3D and VFX. For standard web use, formats like PNG or WebP are more practical choices.

Is SVG to HDR conversion free?

Standard conversions are free on Convertio. Premium plans support larger files and faster processing for production environments.

SVG to HDR Quality Rating

4.4 (40 votes)
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