AVIF stands out among everyday image formats for actually supporting HDR transfer characteristics and up to 12-bit color depth, which is more dynamic range capability than formats like standard JPG or PNG ever had. Radiance HDR (.hdr), created in 1991, predates AVIF by decades and uses a simpler single-layer RGBE structure, so converting an HDR-capable AVIF file to .hdr changes the container format and storage approach rather than adding capability that wasn't already in the AVIF source.
This conversion is useful when a specific lighting, rendering, or visualization tool expects a .hdr file as input, and it's worth noting that the resulting dynamic range depends entirely on whether your original AVIF file was actually encoded with HDR content to begin with.
- Install Turbo Batch Image Converter Pro on your Windows PC.
- Open the app and select Batch Mode for multiple files, or Individual Mode for a single AVIF file.
- Drag your AVIF file or folder into the app window, enabling recursive folder scanning if needed.
- Set the "From" format to AVIF and the "To" format to HDR.
- Click Convert. HDR files are written to the output folder, fully offline.
- 100% offline — your images are never uploaded anywhere
- Bulk conversion of entire folders, including sub-folders, in one click
- Produces .hdr files compatible with architectural lighting and rendering tools
- Multi-core processing for fast handling of large batches
- Option to delete original AVIF files automatically after conversion
- No recurring subscription or hidden upload limits
Is AVIF a good source for HDR content compared to JPG or PNG?
Yes, AVIF supports HDR transfer characteristics and up to 12-bit color, which standard 8-bit formats like JPG and PNG never had, making it a more meaningful HDR source if the file was actually encoded that way.
What software uses the .hdr format?
Photoshop, GIMP, Blender, and most major 3D renderers support .hdr, along with architectural lighting simulation tools that have long relied on the Radiance format specifically.
What's the difference between HDR and EXR as target formats?
EXR supports multiple layers, more channels, and higher floating-point precision, while HDR (Radiance RGBE) is a simpler, single-layer format still common in architectural lighting tools.
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