1) Upload TIFF file to convert
Drop files here, or Click to select
2) Set converting TIFF to EPS options
3) Get converted file
Upload Your File: Go to the site, click on «Upload File,» and select your TIFF file.
Set Conversion Options: Choose EPS as the output format and adjust any additional options if needed.
Convert and Download: Click «Download Converted File» to get your EPS file.
File extension | .TIFF, .TIF |
Category | Image File |
Description | The TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is a widely-used file format for storing digital images, developed by Aldus Corporation (now owned by Adobe Systems). It is a versatile format that supports a wide range of color depths, resolutions, and image types, making it suitable for use in a variety of applications. TIFF files can contain multiple images, each with their own characteristics such as resolution, compression, and color depth. They can also be uncompressed or compressed using a variety of methods, such as LZW, ZIP, and JPEG compression. Additionally, TIFF files can store metadata such as keywords, descriptions, and copyright information. One of the key benefits of the TIFF format is its support for high-quality, lossless image compression. This makes it a popular choice for archiving and sharing images, especially in fields such as graphic design, printing, and photography. TIFF files can also support transparent backgrounds, making them ideal for use in web graphics and other applications where transparency is important. TIFF files can be opened and edited using a wide variety of software programs, including Adobe Photoshop, GIMP, and Microsoft Paint. They are also supported by many operating systems and web browsers. Overall, the TIFF format is a robust and versatile format for storing digital images. Its ability to support multiple images, high-quality compression, and metadata make it a popular choice for a variety of applications, especially those requiring high-quality images. |
Associated programs | CyberLink PowerDVD InterVideo WinDVD VideoLAN VLC Media Player Windows Media Player |
Developed by | Aldus, now Adobe Systems |
MIME type | image/tiff image/tiff-fx |
Useful links | More detailed information on TIFF files |
Conversion type | TIFF to EPS |
File extension | .EPS |
Category | Image File |
Description | EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) is an extension for files based on the PostScript language and intended for printers/image setters featuring image processors supporting PostScript. There are two types of EPS files: vector graphic files, which are supported by and can be edited in Adobe Illustrator, CorelDraw, etc., and EPS photo files, which can be edited in programs like PhotoShop. For easier viewing, EPS files contain bitmap images, because it would take too complicated vector instructions to draw an image. |
Associated programs | Adobe Acrobat CorelDRAW LibreOffice Draw |
Developed by | Adobe Systems |
MIME type | application/postscript application/eps application/x-eps image/eps image/x-eps |
Useful links | More detailed information on EPS files |
TIFF is a raster format (pixels) commonly used for scans, photos, and print-grade images. EPS, meanwhile, is a PostScript wrapper widely accepted by print houses and older RIPs. Converting TIFF to EPS doesn’t “vectorize” the image—your pixels remain pixels—but it packages them in a format that certain workflows and imposition tools prefer. Our converter preserves image dimensions and DPI, so a 300 dpi TIFF becomes a 300 dpi EPS, maintaining sharpness for brochures, books, and packaging.
Color matters in print. If your TIFF is CMYK or Grayscale, the EPS keeps that color space; RGB TIFFs are preserved as RGB unless the source is tagged differently. Transparency in TIFF is flattened during export (EPS doesn’t support native transparency), and embedded clipping paths are retained where applicable, helping you place images with clean cutouts. Compression such as LZW or PackBits is handled automatically; fax-style CCITT TIFFs are supported and retained as efficient 1-bit images inside the EPS.
Working with large or multi-page TIFFs? Upload a single page at a time for the most predictable placement. For scans, ensure the resolution is appropriate for the final size (typically 300 dpi for print, 600 dpi for fine line art). After conversion, check the placed EPS in your layout: verify the BoundingBox, scale (100% ideally), overprint settings, and color profile expectations with your printer.
Because this tool runs in your browser, there’s nothing to install and no sign-up—perfect for quick, one-off jobs from any device. If you need automation (batch folders, command-line runs, server-side processing, or mixing EPS with other formats), our desktop utilities from CoolUtils handle high-volume prepress pipelines with logs, presets, and error reporting. From scan to press-ready asset, this TIFF-to-EPS converter gives you a reliable bridge to classic print workflows without the frustration.