CONVERT
ORF → ICO
Fast, secure ORF to ICO conversion. No registration required.
DRAG. DROP. DONE.
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Here is the short version — ORF is Olympus's RAW camera format. Hence the need for ICO. A ORF to ICO conversion is almost always about making an image land cleanly in another piece of software. Olympus RAW ORF is well-suited to its original niche, but ICO Icon opens on more platforms or fits better into a publishing pipeline. Upload a ORF file above, pick any quality knobs, and download a ready-to-use ICO. Technical note: ORF is Olympus's RAW camera format. Compare that with ICO is the Windows icon container with multiple resolutions packed into one file.
Olympus RAW ORF
Source formatORF is Olympus camera RAW format.
ICO Icon
Target formatICO is the icon file format used for favicons and Windows application icons. A single ICO file can contain multiple image sizes and color depths for different display contexts.
Why convert ORF to ICO
Converting keeps the picture recognisable end-to-end while changing the container that ships it. ICO typically wins on one of three fronts: broader software support, smaller files for the same visual quality, or features like transparency that ORF cannot express. The conversion itself is fast because both sides are raster formats.
HOW TO CONVERT
ORF → ICO
Upload your ORF
Start by dropping the ORF onto the uploader. Files up to 100 MB go through on the free tier without registration.
Conversion happens server-side
Our imagemagick-based pipeline reads the ORF pixel grid, preserves resolution and colour profile, and encodes a clean ICO.
Grab the result
A download button appears as soon as the ICO is ready. Save locally or share the short-lived URL.
Common Use Cases
Cross-platform previews
Windows, macOS and Linux file browsers all render ICO thumbnails; ORF support varies by OS version.
Mobile galleries
iOS Photos, Google Photos and Samsung Gallery index ICO instantly — ORF sometimes falls back to a generic file icon.
Stock photography uploads
Shutterstock, Adobe Stock and similar marketplaces require ICO in their contributor guidelines.
Archive migration
Converting legacy ORF archives to ICO future-proofs the collection against declining codec support.
ORF vs ICO — Strengths and limitations
What each format does best, and where it falls short.
ORF Strengths
- Compact files relative to sensor size (Four Thirds is smaller than APS-C).
- Computational photography features (Live Composite, Pro Capture) baked into format.
- Stable across 20+ years of Olympus/OM SYSTEM bodies.
- In-body stabilization means ORF handheld shots rival tripod work.
Limitations
- Smaller sensor means less dynamic range than full-frame raws.
- Lossy compressed ORF is the default — hidden quality loss.
- Market share is small; fewer tutorials and fewer Lightroom profiles.
ICO Strengths
- Multi-resolution: one file, many sizes, OS picks the right one.
- Universal favicon support in every browser since IE5.
- Supports transparency (1-bit since 1985, full alpha since XP).
- Tiny file size — an entire favicon pack typically fits in under 15 KB.
- No licensing or patent concerns — fully in the public domain spec-wise.
Limitations
- Cannot compress continuous-tone images efficiently — use PNG or WebP for photos.
- Format is essentially frozen in 1999 — no HDR, no wide gamut, no modern features.
- Maximum image dimension is 256×256 px (inside an ICO container).
ORF vs ICO — Technical specifications
Side-by-side comparison of the technical details.
| Specification | ORF | ICO |
|---|---|---|
| MIME type | image/x-olympus-orf | image/vnd.microsoft.icon |
| Extension | .orf | — |
| Container | TIFF/EP with Olympus MakerNote | — |
| Sensor format | Four Thirds / Micro Four Thirds | — |
| Bit depth | 12 or 14-bit | — |
| Max resolutions per file | — | 65 535 images |
| Max single image size | — | 256×256 px |
| Color depths | — | 1, 4, 8, 24, 32 bits per pixel |
| Compression | — | Uncompressed bitmap or embedded PNG (Vista+) |
ORF vs ICO — Typical file sizes
Approximate file sizes for common scenarios.
ORF
- 20 MP ORF (OM-1, E-M1 III) 18-25 MB
- 50 MP Hand-Held High Res composite 60-80 MB
- 80 MP Tripod High Res ORF 100-140 MB
ICO
- Classic favicon (16×16 only) < 2 KB
- Multi-size favicon pack (16/32/48/256) 5-15 KB
- Full Windows app icon set 20-100 KB
Quality & Compatibility
Converting keeps resolution, aspect ratio and colour profile identical to the source. Metadata (EXIF, XMP) transfers where ICO supports it; otherwise it is dropped. If the ORF contained an alpha channel and ICO does not support transparency, the background is flattened to white by default.
Tips for Best Results
- When uploading to Retina / high-DPI contexts, render the ICO at 2× the CSS pixel size; the crispness gap over 1× is noticeable on modern screens.
- Strip EXIF metadata from the ICO before publishing if the ORF came from a phone camera — it often contains GPS coordinates and device IDs.
- If the ORF is a screenshot of text or UI, prefer a lossless ICO target to avoid the JPEG-style ringing around glyph edges.
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
It depends on the codecs involved. If both ORF and ICO are lossy, the pixels are re-encoded and a small amount of detail is discarded — invisible at default quality settings on photographs. If ICO is lossless (PNG, TIFF, BMP) the output keeps every pixel of the decoded ORF exactly, but cannot recover detail that ORF had already compressed away.
Often yes, especially when ICO is lossless. ORF tuned for efficient web delivery will usually produce smaller files than ICO's default settings. If file size matters, drop the quality in Advanced or pick a more compressed target format instead.
KaijuConverter uploads over HTTPS, processes the image in an isolated container and deletes both the source and the output within two hours. No account is required, file contents are never logged, and we do not use uploads to train any model. For confidential material, the paid plan includes a data-processing agreement.
Related comparisons
See these formats side by side to understand which fits your use case best.
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Read guideSecure & Private Conversion
Your files are encrypted during transfer, processed in isolated containers, and automatically deleted within 60 minutes. We never read, share, or store your data.