Convert JPG to SGI
Max file size 100mb.
JPG vs SGI Format Comparison
| Aspect | JPG (Source Format) | SGI (Target Format) |
|---|---|---|
| Format Overview | JPG JPEG The most widely used image format for photographs. Lossy Standard |
SGI Silicon Graphics Image A raster image format developed by Silicon Graphics Inc. in the 1980s for their IRIX workstations. SGI format (also known as IRIS RGB) supports 8 and 16-bit channels with optional RLE compression. Widely used in visual effects, film production, scientific visualization, and 3D rendering pipelines. The format stores multi-channel image data efficiently and remains a standard in professional VFX workflows. Lossless Standard |
| Technical Specifications | Color Depth: 8-bit (24-bit RGB) Compression: DCT lossy Transparency: No Animation: No Extensions: .jpg |
Color Depth: 8/16-bit per channel Compression: RLE or uncompressed Transparency: Yes (RGBA) Animation: No Extensions: .sgi, .rgb, .bw |
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| Processing & Tools | JPG processing: # Read JPG with Pillow
from PIL import Image
img = Image.open("image.jpg")
print(img.size, img.mode) |
SGI creation: # Convert to SGI
img.save("output.sgi", "SGI") |
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| Version History | Format: JPEG Status: Active |
Introduced: 1984 (Silicon Graphics Inc.) Status: Legacy, still used in VFX Evolution: SGI RGB (1984) → RLE extension → Pillow support |
| Software Support | Image Editors: Various CLI Tools: Pillow, ImageMagick |
Image Editors: Nuke, Houdini, Maya, GIMP, Photoshop (with plugin) CLI Tools: Pillow, ImageMagick |
Why Convert JPG to SGI?
Converting JPG to SGI enables your images to be used in professional VFX, 3D animation, and scientific visualization workflows that rely on the Silicon Graphics Image format. The most widely used image format for photographs.
VFX studios, 3D artists, and scientific researchers use SGI format in tools like Nuke, Houdini, Maya, and custom rendering pipelines. Converting from JPG ensures compatibility with these professional workflows.
Our converter processes your JPG image and encodes it in SGI/IRIS RGB format with appropriate channel configuration. The conversion preserves color accuracy and supports both RGB and RGBA output modes.
SGI format supports 8 and 16-bit per channel with optional RLE compression, making it suitable for high-quality texture work and scientific imaging where color precision is critical.
Key Benefits of Converting JPG to SGI:
- VFX Ready: Direct use in Nuke, Houdini, Maya pipelines
- Film Production: Industry-standard format for compositing
- 16-bit Support: High color depth for professional work
- RLE Compression: Efficient lossless compression
- JPG Quality: Preserves quality from JPEG source
- Multi-Channel: Full RGBA channel support
- Free Online: No specialized software required
Practical Examples
Example 1: Preparing Textures for VFX Pipeline
Scenario: A texture artist converts JPG assets to SGI for a film production pipeline.
Source: texture_diffuse.jpg (2 MB) Conversion: JPG → SGI (2048x2048, RGB) Result: texture_diffuse.sgi (12 MB) ✓ Nuke/Houdini compatible ✓ Full color precision ✓ Pipeline-ready format ✓ Professional quality
Example 2: Scientific Data Conversion
Scenario: A researcher converts JPG images to SGI for visualization software.
Source: scan_data.jpg (1.5 MB) Conversion: JPG → SGI (1024x1024) Result: scan_data.sgi (3 MB) ✓ Scientific tool compatible ✓ Color accuracy preserved ✓ Multi-channel support ✓ Standard research format
Example 3: 3D Rendering Asset Preparation
Scenario: A 3D artist converts JPG reference images to SGI for Maya.
Source: reference_photo.jpg (800 KB) Conversion: JPG → SGI (512x512) Result: reference_photo.sgi (768 KB) ✓ Maya native texture format ✓ Consistent color handling ✓ RLE compressed output ✓ Efficient workflow
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q: How does JPG to SGI conversion work?
A: Our converter reads your JPG image, processes the pixel data, and encodes it in SGI/IRIS RGB format compatible with professional VFX and 3D applications.
Q: What SGI variant is created?
A: SGI RGB format with RLE compression, compatible with all SGI-supporting applications including Nuke, Houdini, Maya, and ImageMagick.
Q: Is the conversion lossless?
A: The SGI output is lossless, but the JPG source uses lossy compression, so the original lossy artifacts are preserved.
Q: Does SGI support transparency?
A: Yes, SGI supports RGBA (4-channel) mode with full alpha transparency. Since JPG has limited transparency, the SGI will be RGB only.
Q: Can I convert SGI back to JPG?
A: Yes, use our SGI to JPG converter.
Q: What color depth does SGI support?
A: SGI supports 8-bit and 16-bit per channel, providing up to 48-bit RGB or 64-bit RGBA color depth for professional imaging.
Q: Where is SGI format used today?
A: SGI format is still used in VFX studios (ILM, Weta, Framestore), scientific labs, medical imaging, and any pipeline built on SGI/IRIX legacy systems.
Q: How large will the SGI file be?
A: SGI with RLE compression typically produces files 1.5-3x the size of PNG. Uncompressed SGI is about 3 bytes per pixel (RGB) or 4 bytes per pixel (RGBA).