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IMAGE

Convert VC-1 to DRF

Convert VC-1 to DRF online for free with no sign up, with quality-focused workflow guidance.

Reverse conversion

VC-1 at a glance

VC-1

Microsoft submitted WMV9 to SMPTE for standardization in 2003, and the resulting VC-1 standard was approved in 2006. It was adopted alongside H.264 and MPEG-2 as a mandatory Blu-ray Disc video codec.

DRF at a glance

DRF

Digital photography fragmented into many manufacturer-specific raw formats because camera makers optimized for their own sensors, metadata, and software ecosystems rather than for one shared public raw standard.

Format comparison

Feature
VC-1
DRF
File type

Not available

Not available

Extensions
  • .vc1

  • .drf

MIME type
  • video/vc1

  • image/drf

Compression / quality

Not available

Not available

File size characteristics

Not available

Not available

Compatibility

Not available

Not available

Editability

Not available

Not available

Created year

Not available

Not available

Inventor

Not available

Not available

Status

Not available

Not available

Transparency

Not available

Not available

Animation

Not available

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Primary use cases
  • editing

  • mastering

  • streaming delivery

  • asf

  • h264

  • mp4

  • wmv

  • capture ingest

  • editing

  • web or print delivery

  • jpg

  • tiff

  • png

  • dng

Common software
  • FFmpeg

  • Windows Media Player

  • Blu-ray player firmware

  • Xbox 360 media pipeline

  • VLC

  • LibRaw

  • Adobe Camera Raw

  • vendor photo software

  • archive workflows

Archival suitability

Not available

Not available

Metadata handling

Not available

Not available

Delivery profile

Not available

Not available

Workflow fit

Not available

Not available

Layer support

Not available

Not available

Camera raw data

Not available

Not available

HDR support

Not available

Not available

Streaming ready

Not available

Not available

When to use each format

When to use VC-1

  • editing
  • mastering
  • streaming delivery
  • SMPTE-standardized codec with formal specification and compliance testing.

When to use DRF

  • capture ingest
  • editing
  • web or print delivery
  • Preserve capture-stage image data for later interpretation.

FAQs

Why convert VC-1 to DRF?

Choose DRF as target when compatibility with an older camera-specific raw library is required.

What changes when converting VC-1 to DRF?

Convert to DRF when compatibility with an older camera-specific raw library is required. In most workflows today, DRF is a preservation or migration target rather than a preferred everyday format.

What should I review after converting VC-1 to DRF?

After conversion, review these destination checks: Open converted output in LibRaw and verify behavior on real samples; Compare output against the expected raw quality profile; Many are vendor-specific and poorly documented publicly.

How can I keep quality stable in VC-1 to DRF conversion?

Run representative samples, keep settings deterministic, and monitor these risks: Compatibility often depends on decoder support in tools such as LibRaw, Adobe Camera Raw, or vendor software; Many are vendor-specific and poorly documented publicly; Validate destination compatibility before large-batch conversion.

Format resources

VC-1DRF