1) Upload PPT file to convert
Drop files here, or Click to select
2) Set converting PPT to JPG options
3) Get converted file
Total Image Converter
JPEG, TIFF, PSD, PNG, etc.
Rotate Images
Resize Images
RAW photos
Watermarks
Clear interface
Command line💾 Upload Your File: Go to the site, click on «Upload File,» and select your PPT file.
✍️ Set Conversion Options: Choose JPG as the output format and adjust any additional options if needed.
Convert and Download: Click 👉«Download Converted File»👈 to get your JPG file.
| File extension | .PPT, .PPS |
| Category | Document File |
| Description | The PPT is the file format used in Microsoft Office OS earlier than 2007 for creating presentations in PowerPoint. The PPT is a binary file, which is a set of separate slides. It can be created from a template or not and edited when you need. It contains multimedia (images, graphs, video, sounds), text and various effects, such as transitions from slide to slide. This dynamic presentation is a perfect tool for various business or educational aims and may be presented live on a computer, copied to a carrier or printed. |
| Associated programs | Apple Keynote Microsoft PowerPoint OpenOffice |
| Developed by | Microsoft |
| MIME type | application/vnd.ms-powerpoint |
| Useful links | More detailed information on PPT files |
| Conversion type | PPT to JPG |
| File extension | .JPG, .JPEG, .JPE, .JFIF, .JFI |
| Category | Image File |
| Description | JPG is the file format for images made by digital cameras and spread throughout the world wide web. Saving in JPG format an image loses its quality, because of the size compression. But at the end you have a much smaller file easy to archive, send, and publish in the web. These are the cases when an image's size matters more than image's quality. Nonetheless, by using professional software you can select the compression degree and so affect the image's quality. |
| Associated programs | |
| Developed by | The JPEG Committee |
| MIME type | |
| Useful links | More detailed information on JPG files |
A PowerPoint slide is a canvas of text, shapes, and images layered on top of each other — but the result is locked inside a format that requires Office to view. Converting PPT slides to JPG turns each slide into a standalone image file that can be embedded in a Word document, posted on LinkedIn, attached to an email, used as a thumbnail, or dropped into any CMS without any compatibility concern. No PowerPoint required on the recipient's end — just an image viewer.
PPT is Microsoft PowerPoint's binary presentation format from Office 97. It holds a sequence of slides, each built from text boxes, drawing shapes, embedded images, and background fills stored in a proprietary binary compound document. The format requires a compatible application to render — it has no standalone viewer standard, making it unsuitable for image sharing, web embedding, or platforms that accept only raster images.
| Property | PPT | JPG |
|---|---|---|
| Developed by | Microsoft (1987) | Joint Photographic Experts Group (1992) |
| Format type | Binary slide deck (multiple slides per file) | Raster image (one image per file) |
| Content | Text, shapes, images, animations, transitions | Flat pixel grid — a rendered snapshot of the slide |
| Editability | Fully editable in PowerPoint | Not editable as a presentation; requires image editor |
| Transparency | Supported (alpha in shape fills) | Not supported — transparent areas become white |
| File size | Single file for all slides; typically 1–50 MB | One file per slide; each JPG 200 KB–3 MB depending on resolution |
| Platform support | Requires Office or compatible reader | Opens in every OS, browser, and mobile device natively |
| Use case | Editing, presenting, collaborating on slides | Web publishing, email, social media, CMS image upload |
The converter reads the PPT binary, renders each slide's drawing layer — text, shapes, background, and embedded images — into a pixel buffer at the target resolution. Each rendered slide is then compressed using JPEG's DCT algorithm and saved as a separate numbered file (slide1.jpg, slide2.jpg, etc.). Font substitution is applied for any referenced fonts not available on the server. The rendering resolution determines sharpness: higher DPI produces larger files but crisper text and finer details in charts and diagrams.