Convert PGM to WEBP
Convert PGM images to WEBP format, edit and optimize images online and free.
The PGM which stands for Portable Gray-Map is a simple structured grayscale raster image format designed by Jef Poskanzer in the 1980s. It was designed to easily exchange binary images between different platforms.
WebP is a new modern raster image format developed by Google in 2010. WebP supports both lossless and lossy compressions, animation, alpha transparency channel which makes it a successor for JPEG, PNG, and GIF with the aim to help make the web faster.
Drag & drop or browse your device to select and upload your PGM file.
Use any available PGM to WEBP tools on the preview page and click Convert.
Let the conversion process finish, then download your WEBP image.
Rotate PGM to right (90° clockwise), to left (90° counter-clockwise), 180°, and convert it to WEBP.
Flip PGM vertically and/or horizontally (flop), and convert it to WEBP.
Convert PGM to WEBP with either support of lossy or lossless compression.
Convert PGM to WEBP and change the WEBP quality by adjusting the WebP compression factor for RGB channels.
Convert PGM to WEBP and change the compression without loosing quality. A trade-off between file size and decoding speed.
Convert PGM to WEBP and adjust the deblocking filter parameters including deblocking filter strength, filtering sharpness, and either strong or simple filtering profile.
To change PGM format to WEBP, upload your PGM file to proceed to the preview page. Use any available tools if you want to edit and manipulate your PGM file. Click on the convert button and wait for the convert to complete. Download the converted WEBP file afterward.
Follow steps below if you have installed Vertopal CLI on your macOS system.
cd
to PGM file location or include path to your input file.Follow steps below if you have installed Vertopal CLI on your Windows system.
cd
to PGM file location or include path to your input file.Follow steps below if you have installed Vertopal CLI on your Linux system.
cd
to PGM file location or include path to your input file.