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.
Conversion settings — add a file to adjust
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.