What is a .FFF file?
FFF is the Hasselblad and Imacon camera RAW format. Opened in Hasselblad Phocus.
- Did you know
- FFF dates from Imacon scanners and backs, a company Hasselblad merged with in 2004.
- FFF stands for Flexible File Format, a raw container Imacon devised for its Flextight film scanners before the format reached cameras.
- The format is structured as a flat TIFF that also embeds a preview, the metadata and a history of edits made to the file.
- Because FFF stores fully uncompressed sensor data, files from high-resolution Hasselblad backs can run to hundreds of megabytes each.
- Today FFF is the raw output of Hasselblad’s medium-format digital cameras, opened in the company’s Phocus software.
- What Analyser shows you
- Open camera RAW files from Sony (ARW), Canon (CR2, CR3, CRW), Nikon (NEF, NRW), Fujifilm X-Trans (RAF), Sigma Foveon (X3F), Olympus (ORF), Panasonic (RW2), Pentax (PEF), Adobe DNG and many more. Reads full EXIF and lens data, the true sensor resolution, GPS and histograms, recovers the Sony and Nikon shutter actuation count, and develops the RAW - decoding the sensor to a full-resolution image, or extracting the embedded preview when a true demosaic is not available.
- Open a .FFF file
- Drag a .FFF file onto the Analyser home page (or tap to pick one). It opens entirely in your browser - nothing is uploaded, there is no account, and it works offline once installed.