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 HDR images to PBM format. This tool works for both professionals and casual users. Convert your images to PBM in seconds.
Radiance HDR
The pioneering high dynamic range format for lighting simulation.
The Radiance HDR format (often called RGBE) is a raster image format designed for storing high dynamic range (HDR) data. Rather than standard 8-bit integers, it uses a specialized encoding where pixel colors are stored as Red, Green, and Blue mantissas sharing a single common Exponent (RGBE). This allows it to represent a vast range of luminance values, from direct sunlight to deep shadows, in a relatively compact 32-bit-per-pixel format.
The .hdr format consists of a human-readable header containing variables like exposure and gamma, followed by binary pixel data. The pixel data typically uses the 'Radiance RGBE' encoding. Each pixel is 4 bytes: one byte each for Red, Green, and Blue, and one shared Exponent byte. This 'shared exponent' scheme is efficient but introduces some limitations—if one channel is very bright and another is very dark in the same pixel, color precision can be lost (color banding).
Developed by Greg Ward in the late 1980s for the Radiance lighting simulation system. It was one of the first formats to enable practical HDR storage and became a de facto standard in the CGI industry for Image-Based Lighting (IBL).
Portable Bitmap
The lowest common denominator of image formats.
PBM (Portable Bitmap) is the simplest format in the Netpbm suite, designed to represent monochrome (black and white) images. It uses a straightforward text-based (or simple binary) encoding where '1' represents black and '0' represents white (or vice versa depending on the viewer, though standard entails 1=black). It was designed to be easily emailed and processed by simple scripts.
There are two variants: P1 (ASCII) and P4 (Binary). ASCII P1: The file is human-readable text. A grid of 0s and 1s defines the image. Binary P4: The bits are packed into bytes for efficiency. The header simply states the magic number (P1 or P4) and the dimensions. There is no compression, no index, no palette.
Invented by Jef Poskanzer in the 1980s as a way to send bitmaps via email properly. It became the foundation of the 'pbmplus' (later 'netpbm') toolkit, which provided a standard way to convert between dozens of incompatible 80s file formats.
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