Initializing... drag & drop files here
Supports: EPS
EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) is Adobe's single-graphic vector format — the file a print shop or logo designer hands over. Most browsers, email clients, and image viewers can't open it, so converting to JPEG turns that vector artwork into a universal photo-style image that opens on virtually any device. JPEG is the right target when you want a small, shareable file and your art is photographic or richly shaded; for sharp logos and line art with a transparent edge, EPS to PNG is usually the better choice.
.eps onto the page, or click "+ Add Files" to browse. You can queue several files and convert them with the same settings.| Property | EPS (input) | JPEG (output) |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Vector (PostScript drawing code) | Raster (fixed grid of pixels) |
| Scales without quality loss | Yes — resolution-independent | No — locked to the output resolution you pick |
| Transparency | Can describe an empty background | None — any transparent area is flattened to a solid color |
| Compression | Lossless drawing instructions | Lossy (DCT) — re-compresses every pixel |
| Editable as line art | Yes, in a vector editor | No — pixels are not selectable paths |
| Opens in a browser / phone | Rarely without a vector app | Virtually everywhere |
| Best for | Sending art to a designer or printer | Sharing a finished image online or by email |
No — JPEG has no alpha channel, so any transparent or empty area in the EPS is flattened to a solid color (commonly white) during conversion. If a clean transparent edge matters — logos, icons, art that sits on a colored page — convert EPS to PNG instead, which keeps full transparency. JPEG is the right choice only when the artwork is photographic or already sits on a filled background.
Two things are happening. First, you're sampling an infinitely scalable drawing onto a fixed pixel grid, so a low output resolution can make sharp lines look stair-stepped — pick a larger Width × Height if edges matter. Second, JPEG is lossy: its DCT compression can leave faint halos ("ringing") around hard black-on-white edges. For crisp line art, raise the Quality Preset, increase the resolution, or use PNG, which is lossless and made for flat graphics.
EPS is PostScript code, not a bitmap, so it needs a PostScript interpreter to display. Apple removed built-in EPS support from Preview starting with macOS Ventura (October 2022) — Monterey was the last version that opened it — and Windows has never shown EPS without a vector editor. Most apps can only render the small low-resolution preview some EPS files embed. Rasterizing to JPEG gives you a real image every app can show.
No. The rasterization step samples your vector art onto a pixel grid, and JPEG then re-compresses those pixels with lossy DCT compression, discarding fine detail to shrink the file. Choose a generous output resolution and a high Quality Preset if you may enlarge or print the result later. If you want the pixels stored without quality loss, convert EPS to PNG — its encoding is lossless — and keep the original .eps if you ever need the scalable vector again.
The JPEG is RGB, which covers the full range modern screens display. EPS art authored for print is often in CMYK, and CMYK-to-RGB is an approximation, so a few saturated print colors can shift slightly on screen. For web and screen use this is normal and expected; for a color-critical print reproduction, work from the original vector file in a design app rather than a rasterized JPEG. In our testing, a single-logo EPS rasterizes to JPEG in a couple of seconds; very large or highly detailed art at a high output resolution takes longer to upload and render.
There's no per-file count limit and no watermark. Files are uploaded over an encrypted connection, processed on our servers, and deleted automatically a few hours after conversion — never shared or made public.