Skip to main content
Image Conversion

Convert ORF to BMP — Free Online Converter

Convert Olympus RAW Format (.orf) to Bitmap Image (.bmp) online for free. Fast, secure image conversion with no watermarks or registration....

nebo importovat z

2M+ souborů převedeno

Důvěřují tisíce uživatelů

Bezpečný přenos

Šifrované nahrávání přes HTTPS

Ochrana soukromí

Soubory automaticky smazány po zpracování

Bez registrace

Začněte převádět okamžitě

Funguje všude

Jakýkoli prohlížeč, jakékoli zařízení

Jak převést

1

Upload your .orf 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 .bmp file when it's ready.

About ORF to BMP Conversion

ORF files are proprietary RAW images captured by Olympus and OM System cameras, including the popular OM-D E-M1 series, PEN-F, and the newer OM-1 mirrorless bodies. These files store unprocessed 12-bit sensor data from Micro Four Thirds sensors — typically around 20 megapixels — along with Olympus-specific metadata such as Art Filter presets, in-body image stabilization (IBIS) telemetry, and multi-shot High Res data. Because ORF is a proprietary RAW format, most applications outside dedicated photo editors cannot open it directly.

BMP (Bitmap) is one of the oldest raster image formats, dating back to early Windows releases. It stores pixel data in an uncompressed grid, making it universally readable by virtually every image viewer, operating system, and legacy application. Converting ORF to BMP gives you a fully demosaiced, color-corrected image that any system can display without specialized RAW processing software.

Why Convert ORF to BMP?

Olympus ORF files require RAW-aware software like Olympus Workspace, Adobe Lightroom, Capture One, or darktable to open and edit. If you need to view your Micro Four Thirds captures on a machine without these tools — a public kiosk, an older Windows workstation, or an embedded display system — BMP provides zero-dependency image viewing. Every version of Windows since 3.0 renders BMP natively.

BMP is also useful when you need pixel-perfect, uncompressed output for technical applications. Scientific imaging, machine vision pipelines, and legacy print workflows sometimes require BMP because it guarantees no compression artifacts alter the pixel data. When converting from ORF, the RAW sensor data is demosaiced and rendered at full resolution, then saved with every pixel preserved exactly as computed.

Common Use Cases

  • View Olympus RAW photos on legacy Windows systems lacking RAW codec support
  • Provide uncompressed images for scientific or machine vision analysis pipelines
  • Create pixel-perfect reference renders from OM-D or PEN camera captures
  • Generate images for embedded display systems that only accept BMP input
  • Prepare Olympus photographs for legacy desktop publishing applications

How It Works

The conversion reads the 12-bit Bayer-pattern sensor data from the ORF container, applies demosaicing to reconstruct full-color RGB pixels, and performs basic color correction using the camera's white balance metadata. The output is written as an uncompressed 24-bit BMP (8 bits per channel, RGB). A 20-megapixel ORF file (~15 MB) produces a BMP of approximately 57 MB due to the uncompressed storage format. No sharpening or noise reduction is applied beyond the standard demosaicing interpolation.

Quality & Performance

BMP output preserves the full spatial resolution of the Olympus sensor after demosaicing. Since BMP is uncompressed, there are no encoding artifacts — every pixel value is stored exactly as computed during the RAW processing step. However, the conversion from 12-bit RAW to 8-bit BMP discards the additional tonal depth available in the original ORF data. For maximum dynamic range preservation, consider TIFF (16-bit) instead.

SHARP EngineFastLossless

Device Compatibility

DeviceORFBMP
Windows PCPartialNative
macOSPartialPartial
iPhone/iPadPartialPartial
AndroidPartialPartial
LinuxPartialPartial
Web BrowserNoNo

Tips for Best Results

  • 1BMP files are very large — use PNG instead if you need lossless quality with smaller file sizes
  • 2Keep your original ORF files for future re-editing with updated RAW processors
  • 3For web or sharing purposes, convert to JPEG or WebP instead of BMP
  • 4Olympus High Res Shot ORF files (50-80 MP) will produce extremely large BMPs — check disk space first
  • 5If your Olympus camera saves ORF+JPEG pairs, the embedded JPEG may suffice for quick viewing

Related Conversions

Converting ORF to BMP produces an uncompressed, universally compatible image from your Olympus RAW captures. While the files are large, the format guarantees perfect pixel fidelity and works on any system, making it ideal for legacy compatibility and technical imaging requirements.

Často kladené otázky

Yes. The BMP output is a rendered, baked image — you lose the ability to adjust white balance, exposure recovery, and other RAW parameters. Always keep your original ORF files if you might want to re-edit later.
ORF files use compressed RAW data (~15-25 MB for 20 MP), while BMP stores every pixel uncompressed at 24 bits. A 20 MP image requires about 57 MB in BMP. The size increase is normal for uncompressed formats.
Yes. ORF is used across all Olympus and OM System bodies, from the original E-series DSLRs through the OM-D mirrorless line and the current OM-1 II. The converter handles all ORF variants.
No. Art Filter data is stored as metadata in the ORF file but is not applied during RAW conversion. The output uses standard color rendering. To apply Art Filters, process the ORF in Olympus Workspace first.
PNG uses lossless compression — identical pixel quality but much smaller files. Choose BMP only when the receiving system cannot handle PNG, or when you need raw pixel data without any compression layer.

Related Conversions & Tools