DPX vs PDF
A detailed comparison of Digital Moving-Picture and PDF Document — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.
Digital Moving-Picture
Raster & Vector ImagesDPX (Digital Picture Exchange) is a SMPTE standard file format for digital intermediate and visual effects work. It stores per-frame image data with rich metadata for color management and is widely used in film post-production pipelines.
About DPX filesPDF Document
Documents & TextPDF is the universal standard for sharing documents with consistent formatting across all devices and operating systems. It preserves fonts, images, and layout exactly as intended by the author.
About PDF filesStrengths Comparison
DPX Strengths
- Industry-standard archival format for film.
- Logarithmic color encoding preserves film look.
- Lossless — no generation degradation.
- SMPTE standardized (SMPTE 268M).
- Every VFX and color-grading app reads and writes DPX.
PDF Strengths
- Pixel-perfect fidelity across operating systems, browsers, and printers.
- Embeds fonts, so documents render identically without the reader having them installed.
- Supports digital signatures, encryption, and redaction for legal workflows.
- ISO-standardized (ISO 32000) with multiple validated subsets (PDF/A, PDF/X, PDF/UA).
- Supports both vector and raster content, keeping line art crisp at any zoom level.
Limitations
DPX Limitations
- No compression — file sizes are enormous.
- Not a display format — requires color-managed pipelines.
- Gradually superseded by OpenEXR in modern VFX.
- Overkill for anything but professional film work.
PDF Limitations
- Editing is difficult — the format is optimized for display, not mutation.
- Text extraction can scramble reading order in multi-column layouts.
- File sizes balloon quickly when embedding high-resolution images or fonts.
- Accessibility (screen readers) requires careful tagging that many PDFs skip.
- JavaScript support has historically been a malware vector.
Technical Specifications
| Specification | DPX | |
|---|---|---|
| MIME type | image/x-dpx | application/pdf |
| Extension | .dpx | — |
| Standard | SMPTE 268M | — |
| Bit depths | 8, 10, 12, 16 bits per channel | — |
| Color encoding | Logarithmic (Cineon-style) by convention | — |
| Current version | — | PDF 2.0 (ISO 32000-2:2020) |
| Compression | — | Flate, LZW, JBIG2, JPEG, JPEG 2000 |
| Max file size | — | ~10 GB (practical); 2^31 bytes (theoretical per object) |
| Color models | — | RGB, CMYK, Grayscale, Lab, DeviceN, ICC-based |
| Standard subsets | — | PDF/A, PDF/X, PDF/UA, PDF/E, PDF/VT |
Typical File Sizes
DPX
- 2K DPX frame (2048×1556, 10-bit) ~12 MB
- 4K DPX frame (4096×3112, 10-bit) ~50 MB
- 90-min feature at 4K DPX sequence ~6 TB
- 1-page text-only memo 50–150 KB
- 10-page report with images 500 KB – 2 MB
- Scanned document (per page) 100 KB – 1 MB
- Full-color magazine (48 pages) 10–40 MB
Ready to convert?
Convert between DPX and PDF online, free, and without installing anything. Encrypted upload, automatic deletion after 2 hours.
Frequently Asked Questions
DPX (Digital Moving-Picture) is an image format used to store raster graphics — a two-dimensional grid of pixels describing a picture. It is part of the raster & vector images family and designed around a specific trade-off between file size, visual fidelity, and feature support (transparency, colour depth, compression type). Photographers, web designers, and content creators choose DPX when its particular strengths match the publishing target.
PDF (Portable Document Format) was created by Adobe in 1993 to present documents consistently across all devices and operating systems. It preserves fonts, images, layouts, and formatting regardless of the software used to view it.
Most desktop photo viewers (Windows Photos, macOS Preview, GIMP, Photoshop, Affinity Photo) open DPX natively. On mobile, iOS Photos and Google Photos display DPX in the gallery when supported by the OS. If the format is rare or new, convert to JPG or PNG first — both are universally readable — using our DPX to JPG or DPX to PNG converter.
PDF files can be opened with Adobe Acrobat Reader (free), web browsers like Chrome and Edge, macOS Preview, and alternative readers like Foxit and Sumatra PDF.
Upload the DPX to KaijuConverter and pick a target format (JPG, PNG, WebP, HEIC, TIFF, BMP, SVG, PDF). The conversion runs in the browser via ImageMagick and returns a download in seconds. No account or installation required; both input and output delete automatically within two hours.
It depends on the task. JPG is the smallest file size for photographs; PNG is lossless with transparency; DPX has its own niche that may favour colour depth, animation, or encoding efficiency over one or both of those. For the final web publish, test all three and measure file size plus visible quality on real content.