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Image Conversion

Convert TIFF to SVG — Free Online Converter

Convert Tagged Image File Format (.tiff) to Scalable Vector Graphics (.svg) online for free. Fast, secure image conversion with no watermarks or regis...

またはインポート元

200万以上のファイル変換

数千人のユーザーに信頼されています

安全な転送

HTTPS暗号化アップロード

プライバシー優先

処理後にファイルを自動削除

登録不要

すぐに変換を開始

どこでも動作

あらゆるブラウザ、あらゆるデバイス

変換方法

1

Upload your .tiff 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 .svg file when it's ready.

About TIFF to SVG Conversion

SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) stores images as mathematical paths and shapes in XML, while TIFF stores professional-grade raster pixel data. Converting TIFF to SVG applies vector tracing algorithms to the decoded pixel grid, generating Bezier curves and filled regions that approximate the original image. The SVG result scales to any size without pixelation.

Professional TIFF images that contain diagrams, technical drawings, maps, and line art are good candidates for vectorization. The high resolution and lossless quality of TIFF provides the best possible source data for the tracing algorithm, producing cleaner and more accurate SVG output than lower-quality source formats.

Why Convert TIFF to SVG?

Vector scalability enables TIFF content to work at any size. A scanned TIFF diagram at 300 DPI has a fixed resolution ceiling — enlarge it beyond that and it pixelates. An SVG version scales to any size without quality loss, from thumbnail to poster.

SVG files are editable and programmable. Once vectorized, individual elements in the TIFF-sourced graphic can be recolored, reshaped, styled with CSS, and animated with JavaScript. For web integration, SVG provides interactive capabilities that raster TIFF cannot offer.

Common Use Cases

  • Vectorize TIFF technical drawings for resolution-independent reproduction at any scale
  • Convert TIFF scanned diagrams to editable SVG for modern design workflows
  • Create scalable SVG versions of TIFF maps and charts for web and print
  • Produce CSS-animatable SVG graphics from TIFF-sourced illustrations
  • Generate resolution-independent SVG from TIFF line art for responsive web design

How It Works

The TIFF is decoded to a full RGB bitmap (first page for multi-page TIFFs). Vtracer's color vector tracing algorithm performs color clustering, boundary tracing into Bezier curves, and path optimization. TIFF's high resolution provides excellent source quality for the tracer — more pixels mean smoother, more accurate vector paths. Configuration includes color precision, curve fitting tolerance, speckle filtering, and segment optimization.

Quality & Performance

TIFF's high resolution and lossless quality make it the best possible source for vector tracing. Simple content (line art, diagrams, maps, technical drawings) with clean edges produces excellent SVGs. Photographic TIFFs produce poor SVGs with thousands of tiny polygon paths — these should be converted to JPEG or WebP instead. Multi-page TIFFs yield only the first page for tracing.

SHARP EngineFastMinimal Quality Loss

Device Compatibility

DeviceTIFFSVG
Windows PCNativePartial
macOSPartialPartial
iPhone/iPadPartialPartial
AndroidPartialPartial
LinuxPartialNative
Web BrowserNoNative

Tips for Best Results

  • 1TIFF's high resolution and lossless quality produce the best possible vector traces
  • 2Reduce color precision for technical drawings to get cleaner, simpler SVG paths
  • 3Increase speckle filtering to remove small noise from scanned TIFF sources
  • 4Multi-page TIFFs yield only the first page — trace pages individually
  • 5Run the SVG through SVGO optimization to minimize file size for web deployment

Related Conversions

TIFF to SVG conversion leverages TIFF's professional quality for optimal vector tracing results. Technical drawings, diagrams, and line art gain infinite scalability, while photographic content should target other raster formats.

よくある質問

Yes. Higher resolution provides more pixel data for the tracer, producing smoother and more accurate vector paths. TIFF is the best source format for vectorization.
No. Photographs produce bloated SVGs with thousands of small polygon regions. Convert photographic TIFFs to JPEG, PNG, or WebP instead.
Yes. The output contains standard SVG path elements that open natively in all major vector editors.
Only the first page is traced. Convert pages individually to produce separate SVG files.
For simple graphics, SVG is dramatically smaller. For complex images, SVG can be much larger than the TIFF due to the number of path elements required.

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