Convert CUT Images to PNG8 Online

Dynapik offers a free online tool to change image types - no need to download anything. It's quick and easy to use. You can change your CUT images to PNG8 format. This tool works for both professionals and casual users. Convert your images to PNG8 in seconds.

Possible Conversions

About CUT Format

Dr. Halo CUT

A legacy device-independent bitmap format from the Dr. Halo paint program.

Overview

The CUT format is a legacy raster image format associated with Dr. Halo, a popular paint program for MS-DOS in the 1980s. It was designed to be a device-independent format for storing images. A unique characteristic of the CUT format is that it typically does not store its own color palette. Instead, the palette is stored in a separate file with the extension .PAL. Without this companion file, a CUT image is often rendered in grayscale.

Technical Details

A CUT file begins with a simple 6-byte header specifying the width and height. The image data follows immediately and is compressed using Run-Length Encoding (RLE) to save disk space, which was critical in the floppy disk era. Because the file only contains indices (0-255) for the pixels, it relies entirely on the external .PAL file to map those indices to actual Red, Green, and Blue colors.

History

Dr. Halo was one of the first serious competitors to PC Paintbrush (PCX). The CUT format was widely used in the DOS era for creating graphics, screenshots, and simple illustrations. As Windows became dominant and formats like BMP and GIF standardized color storage, CUT fell into obscurity.

Common Use Cases

  • Legacy Graphics Recovery: Opening old drawings made in Dr. Halo.
  • Palette Swapping: Changing the look of an image by loading a different .PAL file.

Advantages

  • Simple Compression
  • Palette Independence

Limitations

  • Two-File System
  • Obsolete

Technical Specifications

Extension: .cutMIME: image/x-halo-cutMax Color: 8-bit (256 colors)Category: legacy

About PNG8 Format

PNG-8 (8-bit Indexed)

The lightweight champion for simple graphics, offering GIF-like sizes with PNG quality.

Overview

PNG-8 is a specific variant of the PNG format that uses an 8-bit indexed color palette, limiting the image to a maximum of 256 colors. This is the same color technique used by GIF, but PNG-8 uses the superior DEFLATE compression algorithm, resulting in files that are typically even smaller than GIFs. PNG-8 is the secret weapon of web optimization. For logos, icons, and simple illustrations that don't need millions of colors, converting a standard 24-bit PNG to PNG-8 can reduce file size by 60-80% with virtually no visual difference. It supports transparency, usually in binary form (like GIF), though some modern tools can create PNG-8 files with full alpha transparency.

Technical Details

In a PNG-8 file, each pixel is represented by a single byte (8 bits) which acts as an index into a palette (PLTE chunk) of up to 256 RGB colors. This is much more efficient than storing the full 3-byte RGB value for every pixel. Transparency in PNG-8 is typically handled by the `tRNS` chunk, which specifies a single color index as transparent (binary transparency). However, the PNG specification allows the `tRNS` chunk to contain alpha values for palette entries, enabling semi-transparency. Tools like `pngquant` exploit this to create 'Alpha PNG-8' files that have both small size and smooth transparency, though very old browsers (IE6) struggled with this.

History

PNG-8 has been part of the PNG specification since version 1.0 (1996). It was designed to replace GIF, offering better compression and being patent-free. However, due to Internet Explorer 6's poor support for alpha transparency in PNGs, PNG-8 (with binary transparency) was often used as a fallback for years. Today, with modern tools like TinyPNG and pngquant, PNG-8 has seen a resurgence as an optimization target, allowing developers to serve crisp graphics at tiny file sizes.

Common Use Cases

  • Logos and Icons: Brand assets with flat colors and sharp edges.
  • Simple Illustrations: Flat design graphics, charts, and diagrams.
  • Pixel Art: Game assets and retro art.
  • Fallbacks for SVG: Raster versions of vector icons for legacy systems.

Advantages

  • Tiny File Sizes
  • Lossless Quality (within palette)
  • Universal Support

Limitations

  • 256 Color Limit
  • Transparency Complexity

Technical Specifications

Extension: .pngMIME: image/pngMax Color: 8-bit (Indexed)Category: web

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it possible to convert CUT to PNG8 without losing size online?
Definitely! You can configure quality options for the conversion so that the resulting image is as close to the original as possible.
How long does it take to convert CUT image to PNG8 file?
The conversion between CUT and PNG8 is instant without delay.

Why choose Dynapik?

Instant Image Conversions

Experience lightning-fast image conversions with our advanced algorithms. No more waiting for your files to be uploaded before processing.

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Enjoy unlimited image conversions without any hidden fees. Our service is completely free to use, with no limitations on file size or quantity.

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Convert images files between over 20 formats. We support popular formats like PNG, JPG, WebP, HEIC and more.

Accessible on All Devices

Use Dynapik on any device with a modern browser. We support all major platforms such as Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, and iOS.

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