T11 to BMP Converter

Render CID Type 2 font data as uncompressed BMP images online

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Lossless Rendering

BMP stores every pixel without compression, ensuring your T11 font glyphs are rasterized with absolute fidelity — no artifacts or quality loss.

Online Tool

No desktop software needed. Run the T11 to BMP conversion directly in your browser from any operating system.

Fast Results

Our cloud servers render and encode the BMP output in moments — get your uncompressed font image without waiting for local processing.

How to convert T11 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

T11 (Type 11) is a PostScript font type defined by Adobe Systems as part of the CID-keyed font architecture, combining CID glyph addressing with TrueType outline data wrapped in a Type 42 PostScript shell. In Adobe's font type numbering, Types 9, 10, and 11 are CID-keyed counterparts to Types 1, 3, and 42 respectively — so Type 11 is essentially a CID-keyed Type 42, designed for TrueType fonts that contain very large glyph sets, particularly CJK (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) character collections. The format allows PostScript interpreters with TrueType rasterizer support to render CJK TrueType fonts while using CID numeric indexing instead of glyph names, which is critical for character sets numbering in the tens of thousands. Glyph outlines remain in native TrueType quadratic spline format, preserving the original hinting instructions, while the CID layer provides efficient glyph access and subsetting through CMap resources. One advantage is direct TrueType rendering quality — unlike converting TrueType outlines to PostScript cubics, Type 11 passes the original outlines to the rasterizer intact, preserving hand-tuned grid-fitting instructions. The CID indexing provides another benefit by supporting multiple encoding schemes (Unicode, national standards) mapped to the same glyph collection without data duplication. Type 11 fonts appear primarily in professional CJK print production and PDF document workflows where large TrueType-based character sets must be embedded in PostScript-derived output.
Developer: Adobe Systems
Initial release: 1993
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 T11 to BMP?

BMP stores pixel data without compression, giving you a lossless rasterization of T11 font glyphs — ideal for print-ready proofs and pixel-level editing.

How do I open a BMP file?

BMP is natively supported on Windows via Paint and Photos. On macOS, Preview opens BMP files. GIMP and Photoshop handle BMP on all platforms.

Will the file be large?

Yes — BMP is uncompressed, so files can be significantly larger than PNG or JPG equivalents. This is the tradeoff for zero compression artifacts.

Can I convert to PNG instead for smaller size?

Absolutely. Convertio supports T11 to PNG conversion as well, which offers lossless compression with much smaller file sizes than BMP.

Is this free?

Yes, T11 to BMP conversion is completely free on Convertio. Upload, convert, and download — all handled in the cloud.