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Image Conversion

Convert CR2 to JPG — Canon RAW to JPEG Converter

Convert Canon CR2 RAW photos to JPG. Process camera RAW files with automatic white balance and exposure. Free online CR2 converter....

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How to Convert

1

Upload your .cr2 file by dragging it into the upload area or clicking to browse.

2

Choose your output settings. The default settings work great for most files.

3

Click Convert and download your .jpg file when it's ready.

About CR2 to JPG Conversion

CR2 (Canon Raw Version 2) is Canon's proprietary RAW image format used by most Canon DSLR and mirrorless cameras manufactured between 2004 and 2018. CR2 files capture the complete, unprocessed sensor data from the camera — every pixel's raw light reading at full bit depth (12-14 bits per channel) — giving photographers maximum flexibility for post-processing exposure, white balance, color grading, and noise reduction. However, CR2 files are large (20-40 MB each), cannot be displayed by web browsers or most applications, and require specialized software to open.

Converting CR2 to JPG processes the raw sensor data through a demosaicing and rendering pipeline, producing a standard JPEG photograph that displays on every device and platform. Our converter uses Sharp with libraw integration (via ImageMagick fallback) to decode the CR2 Bayer pattern data, apply automatic white balance and exposure correction, and output a high-quality JPEG with natural color reproduction. The result is a ready-to-use photograph suitable for sharing, printing, uploading, and archiving.

Why Convert CR2 to JPG?

Immediate usability drives CR2 to JPG conversion. RAW files are not photographs — they are unprocessed sensor data that must be developed into a viewable image, much like film negatives need developing. JPG is the universal photograph format that opens in every image viewer, web browser, email client, social media platform, and messaging app. Converting CR2 to JPG turns raw sensor data into ready-to-share photographs.

Storage and sharing constraints make JPG essential. A single CR2 file occupies 20-40 MB of storage; the equivalent JPG at quality 90 is typically 3-8 MB — an 80-90% size reduction. For photographers with thousands of images from a shoot, converting to JPG saves gigabytes of storage and makes sharing practical via email, messaging, and cloud services that impose file size limits.

Client delivery workflows require JPG. Professional photographers shoot RAW for editing flexibility but deliver final images to clients as JPG. Wedding galleries, portrait sessions, event photography, product shots, and real estate listings are all delivered in JPG format. Converting CR2 to JPG is the final step in the photography workflow before client handoff.

Common Use Cases

  • Batch-convert Canon DSLR photos from a shoot to JPG for client delivery galleries
  • Convert CR2 files to JPG for uploading to social media, portfolio sites, and stock photo platforms
  • Create JPG previews of a CR2 photo library for quick browsing without RAW editing software
  • Convert Canon RAW photos to JPG for email sharing with family and friends
  • Process wedding and event CR2 files to JPG for online album delivery
  • Convert CR2 product photography to JPG for e-commerce website listings

How It Works

CR2 files store Bayer pattern sensor data at 12 or 14 bits per pixel per channel. The conversion pipeline performs: (1) demosaicing — interpolating the Bayer RGGB pattern to full RGB pixels using high-quality algorithms, (2) white balance correction — applying camera-embedded or automatic white balance to neutralize color casts, (3) exposure adjustment — mapping the high dynamic range sensor data to the 8-bit JPG range, (4) color space conversion — transforming from the camera's native color space to sRGB for universal display, and (5) JPEG compression at configurable quality.

The converter reads embedded EXIF metadata from the CR2 file and preserves it in the JPG output — camera model, lens information, shooting settings (aperture, shutter speed, ISO), GPS coordinates, date/time, and orientation. This metadata is essential for photo management software and enables automatic rotation, geotagging, and catalog organization.

Canon's CR2 format includes an embedded JPG preview at reduced resolution. Our converter does not use this preview — instead, it processes the full-resolution RAW data for maximum quality. The output JPG matches the sensor resolution (e.g., 5472x3648 for a Canon 80D's 24.2 megapixel sensor).

Quality & Performance

Converting RAW to JPG is inherently a quality-reducing process — RAW's 12-14 bits per channel and wide dynamic range are compressed to JPG's 8 bits with lossy JPEG compression. However, this is the standard photographic workflow and the results are excellent. At JPEG quality 90-95, the output is indistinguishable from in-camera JPG processing. The key quality factor is the RAW processing (demosaicing, white balance, exposure) rather than the JPEG compression itself. For critical editing, always work from the CR2 original and convert to JPG only as the final export step.

SHARP EngineModerateSome Quality Loss

Device Compatibility

DeviceCR2JPG
WindowsPartialNative
macOSPartialNative
iOSNoNative
AndroidNoNative
LinuxPartialNative
ChromeOSNoNative

Tips for Best Results

  • 1Always keep original CR2 files as archival masters — JPG conversion is a one-way quality reduction for editing purposes
  • 2Use JPEG quality 90-95 for client delivery and archival, 80-85 for web galleries and social media
  • 3Batch-convert an entire shoot folder at once to save time compared to converting files individually
  • 4Verify white balance on a few sample conversions before processing the entire batch — incorrect camera WB carries over
  • 5Check that EXIF orientation is correct in the JPG output — some viewers may not auto-rotate based on EXIF tags

Related Conversions

CR2 to JPG conversion transforms Canon RAW sensor data into universally viewable photographs. Whether delivering client galleries, sharing snapshots, or creating browsable previews of your RAW library, our converter processes the full-resolution sensor data with professional-quality rendering.

Frequently Asked Questions

Most Canon DSLRs and mirrorless cameras from 2004 to 2018 shoot CR2, including the popular 5D series (Mark II, III, IV), 6D, 7D, 80D, 70D, Rebel series (T3i through T7i), and 1DX. Newer Canon cameras (from ~2018 onward) use CR3 format instead.
The full sensor resolution is preserved — a 24-megapixel CR2 produces a 24-megapixel JPG. However, RAW files contain more dynamic range and color depth than JPG can represent. The conversion applies professional-quality rendering, but fine editing latitude is lost. Always keep the original CR2 for future re-processing.
Yes. Camera model, lens info, aperture, shutter speed, ISO, GPS coordinates, date/time, and orientation are all transferred from the CR2 to the JPG's EXIF data. Photo management software will display the correct metadata.
The converter applies the camera's embedded white balance setting (as shot) by default. This typically produces natural-looking results matching what you saw on the camera's LCD. If the camera white balance was incorrect, the automatic mode may improve it.
Absolutely. The conversion creates a new JPG file and does not modify or delete the original CR2. Best practice is to keep your CR2 files as archival masters and use the JPG copies for sharing and everyday viewing.
Shooting RAW+JPG in camera is common, but the camera's built-in processing has limited options. Converting CR2 later allows you to apply different white balance, exposure, and quality settings. It also lets you process the full-resolution RAW data rather than the camera's sometimes-compressed JPG.
Individual CR2 files convert in 2-5 seconds. Batch processing of a full shoot (hundreds of files) takes 5-15 minutes depending on file count and resolution. The RAW demosaicing step is the most computationally intensive part.
Our converter applies automatic exposure and white balance correction. For fine-tuned adjustments, use a dedicated RAW editor (Lightroom, Darktable, RawTherapee) for creative control, then export as JPG. Our converter is optimized for fast batch processing with good default rendering.
Quality 90-95 is recommended for archival and client delivery — visually perfect with reasonable file sizes. Quality 80-85 is good for web galleries and social media where smaller files improve loading speed. Below 75, compression artifacts become visible on detailed shots.

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