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Supports: PPTX
Render the slides of a PowerPoint (.pptx) deck to Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) so they drop into legacy print and desktop-publishing layouts that only accept .eps placed artwork. One thing to be clear about up front, because most converters won't tell you: this renders each slide to pixels and wraps that raster image inside an EPS (PostScript) container — it does not redraw your slide as editable, resolution-independent vector art. Zoom into the result and you'll see pixels, not crisp vector edges. The value here is workflow compatibility — getting a slide into an .eps-only pipeline — not scalability. Files are uploaded over an encrypted connection, processed on our servers, and deleted automatically a few hours after conversion — no sign-up, no watermark.
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Full name | Encapsulated PostScript |
| Introduced | 1987, by Adobe (with Aldus) |
| Type | Page-description format (PostScript subset); can hold vector or raster |
| What this conversion writes | A rasterized slide image wrapped in a PostScript container |
| Stays sharp when enlarged? | No — it's a fixed-resolution raster, not live vector |
| Pages per file | One image per file (one slide per EPS) |
| Native browser support | None — EPS doesn't render in web browsers |
| Office support note | Microsoft turned off inserting EPS images in Office (April 2017) |
| Best for | Placing slide artwork into legacy .eps-only print/DTP layouts |
| Modern replacement | PDF (vector text, multi-page, widely supported) |
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Full name | Office Open XML Presentation |
| Introduced | PowerPoint 2007 (default deck format since) |
| Standard | ECMA-376 / ISO/IEC 29500 (Office Open XML) |
| Structure | A ZIP archive of XML parts plus embedded media |
| Holds | Editable slides, text, vector shapes, images, video, audio, animations |
| Pages | Multi-slide; each slide can become one output image |
| Best for | Editing, presenting, and exporting to other formats |
.pptx onto the page, or click "+ Add Files" to browse. Queue several decks at once to convert them in a batch. Older binary .ppt decks convert on the PPT to EPS page.No, and this is the most common misunderstanding. EPS is capable of carrying vector data, but this conversion renders each slide to a raster image first and then wraps those pixels in the EPS container. Your text, charts, and shapes become part of a flat picture — you cannot click into them, re-edit them, or have them stay crisp at any zoom level. If you need text to stay as live, selectable vector type, convert the deck to PDF instead, which preserves the type as true vectors.
Because some print and desktop-publishing workflows only accept EPS for placed artwork. Older page-layout applications such as Adobe InDesign and QuarkXPress, and PostScript-based prepress (RIP) pipelines, may require an .eps to import or position a graphic. Rendering a slide to EPS satisfies that requirement when the workflow won't take a PDF or PNG. If your software does accept PDF, that path keeps text sharp and is the better choice — a PowerPoint file isn't a prepress-ready format on its own.
You get one EPS per slide. EPS was designed to hold a single illustration, not a multi-page document, so a ten-slide deck produces ten separate .eps files, which we bundle into a ZIP for download. If you specifically need every slide in one container, a multi-page PDF is the right format rather than EPS.
No. EPS is a single static image of each slide, so it captures only the final on-screen state of a slide. Entrance and emphasis animations collapse to where they end up, slide transitions have no equivalent, and an embedded video leaves at most its poster frame as a still. This is inherent to rendering a slide to any image format — if motion matters, export the deck to MP4 video from PowerPoint instead.
EPS is a legacy format kept alive by specific print and publishing pipelines. Adobe Illustrator still opens and exports it but treats it as a backward-compatibility option, and Microsoft turned off the ability to insert EPS images into Office documents in an April 2017 security update, citing the risk of EPS's embedded PostScript scripting. For most modern needs PDF has replaced it. EPS remains useful precisely where a workflow was built around .eps and accepts nothing else.
300 DPI is the default and the standard density for print, so leave it there unless you have a reason to change it. Lower values such as 96 or 150 DPI render smaller, lighter files suited to on-screen placement; raising the DPI sharpens small text at the cost of a larger file. Because the slide is rasterized, the DPI you choose is locked into the pixels. In our testing, a 16:9 slide rendered at 300 DPI placed sharply at 1:1 in a layout, but stretching it well beyond its rendered size showed visible softening on body text. For artwork that must stay crisp at any size, keep the deck as PDF; if you just need a sharp raster image, PPTX to PNG is simpler than EPS.
Your PPTX is sent to our servers over an encrypted (TLS) connection, converted there, and the uploaded file and its EPS output are deleted automatically a few hours after conversion. There's no sign-up, no watermark on the output, and files are never shared or made public. The practical limit on a large deck is upload size and time, not your device.