CONVERSION GUIDE
CUR to RAW Conversion Guide
CUR to RAW is not available as a browser conversion yet. This guide explains the workflow, what changes in the file, and what must be preserved before upload is enabled.
Guide only. CUR to RAW is not available in the browser yet. This guide explains what must be preserved and links to safer alternatives that work now.
CUR to RAW is not available yet
No upload box is shown until the CUR reader and RAW export path can preserve the file safely.
- No upload prompt is shown until the conversion is actually supported.
- Downloads must match the real output format before this page becomes available.
- No hidden loss of layers, animation, image structure or color data.
What changes before converting CUR to RAW
CUR is used for favicons and app icons, so size variants and transparency are important.
RAW is part of camera RAW workflows, so conversion normally needs decoding, color processing and tone mapping before export.
CUR input: Windows cursor icon files converted to standard image/icon formats. CUR cursor files are icon-style image containers and need dedicated parsing before upload is enabled.
RAW output: Camera RAW images converted to JPG, PNG or WEBP. RAW is a family term and needs camera-specific decoders.
This page focuses on the exact CUR to RAW task: compatibility, compression, transparency, animation, metadata, color profile and output-quality trade-offs for this pair.
Transparency and layers
- Metadata, EXIF orientation and color profiles should be handled deliberately rather than silently copied or dropped.
Best use cases for CUR to RAW
- Make CUR files easier to open in software that expects RAW.
- Prepare RAW output for upload forms, websites, archives or sharing workflows.
- Create a predictable RAW copy while keeping the original CUR file untouched.
Quality, file size and compatibility
RAW output should be chosen for the actual destination: web pages need small files, archives need predictable compatibility, design handoff may need transparency, and camera workflows may need color accuracy. ImageConvert separates available routes from guide-only routes so visitors do not get mislabeled downloads or silent animation/layer loss.
For lossy outputs such as JPG, JPEG, JFIF and many WEBP settings, quality can reduce file size but permanently changes pixels. For lossless or alpha-friendly outputs such as PNG and some WEBP settings, transparency and sharp graphics can be preserved when the source data supports it. Professional formats require explicit color management and metadata handling.
What this conversion must preserve
A safe CUR to RAW workflow must decode the source format, preserve the parts users care about, and explain any unavoidable changes before download.
- File structure, layers, animation, pages or RAW sensor data should not be silently discarded.
- Transparency, metadata, EXIF orientation and color profiles need explicit handling.
- The page should offer upload only after downloaded RAW files are verified as real RAW output.
FAQ
Is CUR to RAW available now?
Not yet. ImageConvert explains the workflow and keeps upload disabled until this conversion is reliable.
What changes when I convert CUR to RAW?
Metadata, EXIF orientation and color profiles should be handled deliberately rather than silently copied or dropped.
Will CUR to RAW keep transparency, animation or layers?
It depends on the source and target. RAW output follows RAW format limits, so transparency, animation, editable layers, metadata and color profiles must be handled explicitly by the conversion engine.
Can I keep the original CUR file after converting to RAW?
Yes. ImageConvert is designed to create a new RAW output and leave the original CUR file unchanged.
When this page should become a live converter
This page can become a live converter after ImageConvert has a proven CUR decoder, a real RAW export path, artifact-byte tests and clear limits for file size, metadata and visual fidelity.