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Convert image files with our easy to use and free tool. Our tool lets you upload a PSD (Adobe Photoshop) file and from this, create a new image saved in the BMP (Bitmap Image File) format that you can then download and edit/use within image file editors or use for high definition printing applications.
Here are 2 simple steps to convert your PSD to BMP.
First click the "Upload..." button, select your PSD file to upload. Select any configuration options. When the PSD to BMP conversion has completed, you can download your BMP file straight away.
We aim to process all PSD to BMP conversions as quickly as possible, this usually takes around 5 seconds but can be more for larger more complex files so please be patient.
We aim to create the most accurate conversions with our tools. Our tools are under constant development with new features being added every week.
Yes, of course! We do not store the PSD file you submit to us. The resulting BMP file, once created is deleted 1 hour after upload and the download link will expire after this time.
Yes! Our PSD to BMP tool will run on any system with a modern web browser. No specialist software is needed to run any of our conversion tools.
Extension: PSD
Full Name: Adobe Photoshop
Type: Image
Mime Type: image/vnd.adobe.photoshop
Format: Binary
Extension: BMP
Full Name: Bitmap Image File
Type: Image
Mime Type: image/bmp
Format: Binary
The PSD file format is the native raster image format used by Adobe's Photoshop image application. The format stores raster image data and is the most popular image format for computer graphics around today. Originally available on Macintosh computers Photoshop was ported to Windows in 1993.
The format has evolved over the years and compared to similar formats stores not just raster image data but additional information such as layers, masks, alpha channels, clipping paths and more. PSD files have a limit of 30,000 pixels in height and width and an overall file size limit of 2GB.
The BMP file format is a two dimensional image file format popular on Microsoft Windows operating systems. Data is stored in the BMP file in a raster format with pixels being represented using various colour depths ranging from monocrome 1-bit per pixel (bpp) to full color 24-bits per pixel.
The format can also contain an image alpha channel which is typically 8 bits per pixel in size and is used to describe image transparency. BMP files can also optionally be compressed using a lossless compression algorithm meaning smaller files with no loss of image quality.