RAW To SVG Converter

Convert your RAW images (CR2, NEF, ARW, DNG, etc.) to SVG format.

Drag & Drop RAW files here

or

From my Computer
By URL
From Google Drive
From Dropbox

Import a RAW image directly from a public URL, Google Drive, or Dropbox.

Max file size: 100MB

🔒 Files are processed securely ⚡ Conversion happens in your browser đŸ—‘ī¸ Files are never uploaded or stored

â„šī¸ SVG files will contain the image embedded as a PNG.

Your images are processed securely. No files are uploaded or stored on our servers.

Convert RAW to SVG online to wrap your camera images inside a scalable SVG container. RAW formats such as CR2, NEF, ARW, DNG, RW2, ORF, PEF, and RAF store rich raster sensor data. This tool decodes your RAW and embeds it as a base64-encoded image within an SVG file, making it easy to drop a camera photo into SVG-based workflows, responsive containers, and modern web layouts.

Important honest note: this is raster-in-SVG embedding, not true vector tracing. RAW captures are detailed photographs, so the pixels are preserved inside the SVG wrapper - they are not converted into scalable vector paths. If you need the reverse direction, use our SVG to RAW converter. For genuine raster output instead, try RAW to PNG, or keep a lossless archive with our RAW to TIFF. Simply upload your RAW files, convert them locally in your browser, and download the SVGs in seconds.

2M+
Images Converted
50+
Formats & Combinations
99.9%
Uptime
0
Data Stored

Lightning Fast

Convert images in seconds with our optimized engine that runs entirely in your browser - no uploads, no waiting.

Privacy First

No account needed. No data uploaded to servers. Your files stay on your device, processed locally in your browser.

Batch Processing

Convert multiple RAW images at once with a single click. Download results individually or as a ZIP archive.

Pro Quality

Professional-grade conversion engine that handles large RAW files reliably with accurate color and detail.

How It Works

Convert your RAW images to SVG in 4 simple steps. No sign-up required, no software to install.

Upload Your Images

Click to select or drag and drop your RAW files. You can also import from URL, Google Drive, or Dropbox.

Choose Settings

Pick SVG as your output format and adjust any available options to match your needs before converting.

Convert Instantly

Processing happens entirely in your browser. No uploads, no server-side processing. 100% local and private.

Download Results

Get your converted SVG files individually or download all at once as a ZIP file. Ready in seconds.

Try It Now - It's Free

Same Image, Different Format

Our converter preserves your image faithfully. Move your cursor across the image to compare - the visual output stays the same. Only the format changes.

Original RAW image before conversion
Converted SVG image after conversion
RAW Original
SVG Converted

Converting RAW to SVG embeds your decoded camera image inside an SVG container. The visual is identical because the photographic pixels are preserved - this is raster-in-SVG embedding, not vector tracing, so the photo does not become true scalable vector paths.

Convert RAW to SVG Online - Free Raster-in-SVG

Easily wrap your RAW camera images inside an SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics) container - right in your browser. This converter decodes your RAW and embeds the resulting image as a base64-encoded PNG inside an SVG file, so a camera photo can be used anywhere an SVG is expected. Be aware this is raster embedding, not vector tracing - the photographic pixels are preserved inside the SVG, not redrawn as mathematical paths. If you need the reverse conversion, use our SVG to RAW converter. For standard raster output, try RAW to PNG. This free RAW to SVG converter suits SVG-only workflows and responsive embedding.

âš–ī¸ RAW vs SVG - Quick Comparison

Feature RAW (Camera Image Formats) SVG (Scalable Vector Graphics)
Image Type Raster (high-bit-depth) SVG container (raster embedded)
True Vector ✗ No ✗ No (raster inside)
Scalability Fixed resolution Scales the container, not the pixels
Compression None (raw data) PNG (embedded)
Web Support ✗ No ✓ All browsers
Best For Professional editing SVG workflows, responsive embedding

It is essential to understand what this conversion does and does not do. RAW is a raster format - a photograph made of fixed pixels from your camera's sensor. SVG is normally a vector format defined by mathematical paths that scale infinitely. This tool does not trace your RAW photo into vector paths - true vectorization requires specialist software and only works well on simple, flat graphics, never on detailed photographs. Instead, it decodes your RAW and embeds the resulting raster as a base64-encoded PNG inside an SVG wrapper. The result is a valid SVG file you can use in SVG-only workflows and responsive containers, but the image inside is still made of photographic pixels, so it will not gain true infinite scalability or become editable as vector shapes. For a normal raster image, convert your RAW to RAW to PNG or RAW to PNG instead. For archival, keep a RAW to TIFF.


đŸŽ¯ When to Use SVG (Raster-Embedded)

This raster-in-SVG conversion is useful in specific workflow situations with your camera images. Here is when it makes sense:

đŸ“Ļ

SVG-Only Workflows

Some systems, templates, or build pipelines accept only SVG files. Wrapping a camera image in an SVG container lets you slot a raster photo into those workflows without changing the rest of your toolchain.

📐

Responsive Containers

An SVG element scales smoothly within responsive layouts. Embedding a camera image in SVG lets it sit inside a flexible, viewBox-driven container that resizes cleanly with the page, even though the photographic pixels stay fixed.

🔗

Single-File Embedding

Because the image data lives inside the SVG as base64, the result is a single self-contained file with no external image dependency. This can simplify embedding a photo in documents and certain web components.

🌐

Universal Browser Display

Unlike RAW, which browsers cannot show, the SVG wrapper displays in every modern browser. This is a way to make a camera image viewable on the web inside an SVG element.

For a genuine, standard raster image, convert your RAW to RAW to PNG or RAW to PNG instead. For archival, keep a RAW to TIFF. To produce icons, use the RAW to ICO converter.


📷 When to Keep RAW Instead

Because this is not true vectorization, SVG embedding is rarely the best choice for a photograph. In most cases, keep your RAW or pick a raster format. Knowing when not to convert avoids surprises:

🎨

You Expect True Vectors

If you want infinitely scalable, editable vector paths, this tool will not deliver them - it embeds photographic pixels, not paths, and photos cannot be cleanly vectorized. Keep your RAW and use a raster format.

đŸŽšī¸

Active Editing

While editing your image, keep the RAW - it holds far more recoverable data than an embedded-raster SVG. Do all serious editing before exporting to any final format.

📷

Normal Image Sharing

For a regular photo to view, email, or upload, the SVG wrapper adds overhead with no benefit. Convert your RAW to RAW to PNG or RAW to PNG instead for a clean, standard, shareable raster image.

đŸ—„ī¸

Archival Masters

Your editable, archival source should remain RAW, with a lossless RAW to TIFF for preservation. An embedded-raster SVG is a delivery wrapper, never a master copy.

Need other outputs from your RAW? Convert to RAW to PNG for sharing, to RAW to PNG for lossless graphics, or to RAW to PSD for layered editing.


💎 Key benefits / Why convert RAW to SVG

🌐

Web-Displayable Wrapper

Browsers cannot show RAW, but they render SVG everywhere. Wrapping your camera image in SVG produces a file that displays on the web while keeping the photo inside.

📐

Fits SVG Workflows

When a pipeline or template requires SVG, this conversion lets a raster camera image participate without reworking your tools. The container scales with responsive layouts even though the pixels are fixed.

🔗

Self-Contained File

The base64-embedded image lives entirely inside the SVG, so there is no separate image file to manage. This single-file convenience suits certain embedding scenarios.

✅

Honest, Predictable Output

This tool is clear about what it does: raster embedding, not vector tracing. For a real raster image, see RAW to PNG; keep your RAW master and a lossless RAW to TIFF for archival.


âš™ī¸ Features of this tool

  • ✓ Convert single or multiple RAW files at once - batch processing supported
  • ✓ Embeds the decoded image as base64 PNG inside an SVG container
  • ✓ Supports major RAW formats (CR2, NEF, ARW, RW2, DNG, ORF, PEF, RAF, and more)
  • ✓ Canvas-based encoding via fast browser-native APIs
  • ✓ Produces a valid, web-displayable SVG file from a RAW source
  • ✓ Transparency preserved via the embedded PNG inside the SVG
  • ✓ Batch ZIP download: all converted SVG files bundled into a single archive
  • ✓ Works on all modern browsers - Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Safari
  • ✓ Mobile-friendly: responsive on phones, tablets, and desktops
  • ✓ Client-side only: all data stays in your browser. No server uploads, ever

📋 How to use (step-by-step)

  1. Select your RAW files Click "Select File" or drag files directly into the drop zone. You can also import from URL, Google Drive, or Dropbox.
  2. Choose SVG output Select SVG as your output format and adjust any available options before converting.
  3. Convert your files Click "Convert" to start. Each file is processed locally in your browser with real-time progress. Conversion takes only seconds.
  4. Download your files Download each SVG individually, or grab everything at once in a single .zip archive.
  5. Convert more anytime Process as many RAW files as you like - there are no limits, no watermarks, and nothing is ever uploaded to a server.

🔧 Technical notes (what to expect)

âš ī¸ Raster embedding, not vectorization
â–ŧ

This tool decodes your RAW and embeds the result as a base64-encoded PNG inside an SVG container. This is raster-in-SVG embedding - NOT true vector tracing. The photographic pixels are preserved, not converted to scalable paths. Photos cannot be meaningfully vectorized; true vectorization is for simple, flat graphics only.

📐 Scaling behavior
â–ŧ

The SVG container can scale within responsive layouts, but the embedded image is still made of fixed photographic pixels - enlarging it past its native resolution will show the same pixelation as the original raster. SVG does not add detail that was not in the RAW.

🔍 Transparency is preserved
â–ŧ

Because the image is embedded as PNG data, any transparency in a rendered RAW image carries through to the SVG. The wrapped image keeps its alpha channel inside the SVG container.

💾 File size note
â–ŧ

Base64 encoding makes the embedded data roughly a third larger than the raw PNG. For a normal, smaller raster file, convert to RAW to PNG instead - SVG embedding is for SVG-specific workflows, not size savings.


💡 Use cases / Examples

01

Developers who need to feed a camera photo into an SVG-only template or build pipeline, embedding it in an SVG container so it fits the required format without changing the toolchain.

02

Web teams placing a rendered RAW image inside a responsive SVG element so it scales with a flexible layout, while understanding that the photographic pixels do not gain true vector scalability.

03

Users who need a single self-contained file with the image data inside the SVG for a specific embedding scenario, keeping the RAW master and using RAW to PNG for normal images.

04

Designers prototyping SVG-based components who want a placeholder photo from a RAW inside an SVG wrapper, then later replacing it with true vector artwork made in dedicated software.


This converter is part of our complete image tools suite. Here are the tools most commonly used alongside RAW to SVG conversion:

— WHO IT'S FOR —

Built for Everyone in India

Whether you're a professional photographer, retoucher, or hobbyist delivering finished work, this tool is for you.

📸 Photographers đŸŽžī¸ Photo Editors 👩‍🎨 Graphic Designers đŸ–¨ī¸ Print Professionals 📰 Photojournalists 🎓 Students & Educators đŸ’ŧ Studios & Agencies đŸžī¸ Hobbyist Shooters

FAQs - RAW To SVG Converter

No, and this is important to understand. The tool decodes your RAW and embeds the resulting raster image as a base64-encoded PNG inside an SVG container - it does not trace the photo into mathematical vector paths. True vectorization, which produces infinitely scalable editable shapes, requires specialist software and only works well on simple, flat graphics, never on detailed photographs. The SVG this tool creates is a valid, web-displayable file, but the image inside is still made of photographic pixels from your camera.

The photo realism is preserved exactly, because the tool embeds the actual decoded image inside the SVG - it does not attempt to trace or simplify it into vectors. This is the honest behavior: a detailed photograph cannot be meaningfully vectorized without losing its realism, so instead the full raster image is wrapped in an SVG container. The result looks identical to the source photo; it simply gains an SVG wrapper for compatibility, not true scalability.

No. Because the SVG contains an embedded raster photo rather than vector paths, you cannot edit it as shapes, curves, or anchor points in a vector editor. You can open the SVG and see the embedded image, and you can adjust the container, but the picture itself remains photographic pixels. If you need editable vector artwork, that requires tracing simple, flat graphics in dedicated software - not embedding a detailed RAW photo in an SVG.

Not in the traditional vector sense. SVG is ideal for logos, icons, diagrams, and flat graphics - not detailed photos, which are inherently raster. This tool lets you wrap a RAW photo in an SVG container for workflow compatibility, but the photo does not become a true vector and gains no real scalability. For normal photographic use, convert your RAW to JPG, PNG, or WebP instead, which are the appropriate raster formats for camera images.

No. All conversion happens entirely in your browser using client-side JavaScript. Your RAW files never leave your device - nothing is uploaded, transmitted, or stored anywhere. This keeps your images completely private, and the tool works even offline once the page has loaded. There is zero data collection involved in wrapping your RAW files inside an SVG container.

The main reasons are workflow and compatibility. Some systems, templates, or build pipelines accept only SVG files, and this conversion lets a raster camera photo participate by wrapping it in an SVG container. It also produces a single self-contained file that displays in every browser - unlike RAW, which browsers cannot show. It is a practical bridge for SVG-specific scenarios, as long as you understand the image inside remains a raster photo, not true vector art.

Yes. The image is embedded as PNG data inside the SVG, and PNG supports full alpha transparency, so any transparency in a rendered RAW image carries through cleanly. RAW captures are opaque to begin with, but if you have edited transparency into the image before conversion, the wrapped result keeps it inside the SVG container, displaying correctly on any background in the browser.

Base64 encoding, which is how the image is embedded inside the SVG, increases the data size by roughly a third compared to the raw PNG. So an SVG-wrapped photo is typically larger than the equivalent standalone PNG or JPG. If file size matters and you do not specifically need an SVG, convert your RAW to WebP or JPG instead for a much smaller, standard raster image that displays everywhere.

Yes. Batch conversion is fully supported - select or drag in multiple RAW captures and wrap them all in SVG containers in a single operation, then download each individually or as a single ZIP archive. All processing happens privately in your browser with nothing uploaded. This is useful when an SVG-only workflow needs several camera images prepared at once in the required container format.

Absolutely. The embedded-raster SVG is a delivery wrapper, not a master - it holds a fixed-resolution copy of your photo with no editing latitude. Always keep your RAW masters, and consider a lossless TIFF for archival. Treat the SVG purely as a compatibility output for SVG-specific workflows, regenerating it from the RAW whenever needed rather than relying on it as your source of truth.

Yes, it is entirely free with no limits, no watermarks, no sign-up, and nothing to install. Wrap as many RAW files in SVG containers as you like, whenever you like. Everything runs locally in your browser, so there are no server costs. It is part of our complete suite of free, privacy-first image tools, all built to run instantly while keeping your camera files securely on your own device.

Start Converting Images

Convert your RAW camera files to SVG containers - web-displayable, private, and browser-based. No sign-up required.

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