XCF to PGX Converter

Convert XCF images to PGX format — no install needed

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Secure Processing

Your XCF files are deleted immediately after conversion. PGX outputs are removed from servers within 24 hours — your images stay private.

Format Bridge

Bridge the gap between XCF and modern formats. The converter handles the technical translation so you get a clean PGX file.

Any Device Works

Run the XCF to PGX converter from a desktop, laptop, tablet, or phone — all you need is a web browser and internet access.

How to convert XCF to PGX

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

XCF (eXperimental Computing Facility) is the native file format of GIMP (GNU Image Manipulation Program), named after the computing facility at UC Berkeley where Spencer Kimball and Peter Mattis originally developed GIMP as a student project, with the format introduced alongside GIMP 1.0 in 1998. XCF stores the complete editing state of a GIMP project: all layers with their positions, dimensions, opacity, and blending modes; layer masks; channels (including custom alpha channels); paths (vector shapes stored as Bezier curves); parasites (arbitrary named data attached to the image or individual layers); and the image's color profile, resolution, guides, and grid settings. The format supports 8-bit, 16-bit, and 32-bit floating-point precision per channel in RGB, grayscale, and indexed color modes, and uses a tile-based internal structure where the image is divided into 64x64 pixel tiles that are individually RLE-compressed. Each layer in an XCF file is stored independently with its own dimensions (layers can be larger or smaller than the canvas), enabling non-destructive editing workflows where source material is preserved at full resolution. One advantage is complete state preservation: XCF files save everything needed to resume editing exactly where you left off — every layer, mask, path, and setting — making them the essential working format for any multi-session GIMP project. The format's open specification is another strength: the XCF structure is fully documented and readable by GIMP, XnView, ImageMagick, and various programming libraries, ensuring project files remain accessible without vendor lock-in.
Initial release: 1998
PGX is a simple single-component raster image format defined as part of the JPEG 2000 standard (ISO/IEC 15444) for use in conformance testing and verification of JPEG 2000 codec implementations. Introduced around 2000 alongside the JPEG 2000 specification itself, PGX files store a single image component (one color channel or grayscale plane) with a text header followed by raw pixel data, providing an unambiguous reference representation against which encoder and decoder outputs can be compared sample by sample. The header is a single ASCII line specifying endianness (ML for big-endian, LM for little-endian), signedness (+ for unsigned, - for signed), bit depth (1 to 32 bits), width, and height. The pixel data follows as raw binary values, each occupying the minimum number of bytes needed for the specified bit depth, with one value per pixel. For multi-component images (like RGB), each component is stored in a separate PGX file. The format's deliberate simplicity — no compression, no metadata, no multi-channel support — ensures there are no ambiguities in interpretation that could mask codec bugs. One advantage is verification precision: PGX's uncompressed, exactly-specified representation allows bit-exact comparison of decoded JPEG 2000 output against reference images, essential for certifying that a codec implementation conforms to the standard. The format's role in the JPEG 2000 conformance testing framework means it is implemented by every serious JPEG 2000 codec (OpenJPEG, Kakadu, etc.) and used in the official ISO conformance test suite. PGX files can also be processed by ImageMagick and various JPEG 2000 development tools.
Initial release: 2000

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert XCF to PGX?

XCF is GIMP's native format — converting to PGX creates a shareable version that recipients can view without installing GIMP or managing layers.

What can I use to view PGX files?

JPEG 2000 reference software, OpenJPEG, GIMP, and image processing tools that handle PGX test images.

Are colors preserved during conversion?

Color data from the XCF file is mapped accurately into PGX. The conversion maintains the original color profile as closely as the target format allows.

Does converting XCF to PGX lose quality?

The conversion preserves the quality stored in the original XCF file. No additional degradation occurs during the format change on Convertio.

Is XCF to PGX conversion free?

Standard conversions are free on Convertio. Premium plans provide additional benefits for users who need to process larger volumes regularly.

Where can I upload XCF files from?

You can upload from your local device, Google Drive, Dropbox, or paste a direct URL. Convertio pulls the XCF file from any of these sources.