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 SVGZ images to PSD format. This tool works for both professionals and casual users. Convert your images to PSD in seconds.
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Compressed Scalable Vector Graphics
The bandwidth-saving standard for scalable vector graphics, combining XML flexibility with gzip efficiency.
SVGZ is the compressed version of the Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) format. It consists of a standard SVG file—which is text-based XML—compressed using the GZIP algorithm. This compression typically reduces file sizes by 50-80%, making SVGZ an excellent choice for web delivery where bandwidth and load times are critical. Functionally, an SVGZ file behaves exactly like an SVG file once decompressed by the browser or viewer. It retains all the capabilities of the SVG standard, including resolution independence, interactivity, animation support, and styling with CSS. The format was introduced to address the verbosity of XML, which often results in large file sizes for complex vector illustrations. While SVGZ offers significant performance benefits, it requires proper server configuration to ensure browsers handle the 'Content-Encoding: gzip' header correctly. Despite this minor hurdle, it remains a powerful tool for delivering high-quality vector assets efficiently.
An SVGZ file is created by applying the DEFLATE compression algorithm (via GZIP) to an SVG document. Since SVG files are plain text XML, they contain a high degree of redundancy—repeated tags, attributes, and whitespace—which makes them highly compressible. It is not uncommon to see size reductions of over 70% compared to the uncompressed original. Technically, the file structure is identical to a standard GZIP archive containing a single file named with an .svg extension. When a user agent (like a web browser) requests an SVGZ file, it decompresses the stream in memory and parses the resulting XML DOM. This process is transparent to the user and typically faster than downloading the larger uncompressed file, despite the CPU cost of decompression. SVGZ supports all SVG 1.1 and 2.0 features, including paths, shapes, text, gradients, filters, and scripting. However, because the file is binary compressed data, it cannot be opened or edited directly in a text editor without first being decompressed.
The SVG specification was developed by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) starting in 1999, with SVG 1.0 becoming a recommendation in September 2001. The need for compression was recognized early on due to the verbose nature of XML. The SVG 1.1 specification, released in 2003, explicitly mentioned the use of gzip compression for SVG files, standardizing the .svgz extension. Support for SVGZ grew alongside SVG adoption. While early browser support was spotty (Internet Explorer required plugins until IE9), modern browsers have supported SVGZ natively for over a decade. It has become a standard export option in major vector graphics software like Adobe Illustrator and Inkscape, facilitating its widespread use in web design and digital publishing.
Photoshop Document
The industry standard for digital image editing.
PSD (Photoshop Document) is the proprietary file format of Adobe Photoshop. It is the de facto standard in the digital art, photography, and graphic design industries. Unlike final output formats (JPG, PNG), a PSD is a working file that preserves the editor's state: independent layers, editable text, masks, blend modes, filters, and paths.
A PSD file is divided into five major parts: File Header, Color Mode Data, Image Resources (metadata like paths, guides), Layer and Mask Information (the bulk of the data), and Image Data (a flattened backward-compatible preview). This structure allows Photoshop to save complex non-destructive editing states.
Created by Thomas Knoll in 1988 for the original version of Photoshop. It has evolved with every version of the software, adding support for new features (vectors in v6, smart objects in CS2) while maintaining remarkable backward compatibility.
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