Download TIFF Sample Images

Tagged Image File Format

Download free TIFF/TIF image files for testing and development. Professional-quality sample images to test converters, print workflows, scanning applications, and image archival systems.

Available Files (3)

TIF

blue-tiff-jpeg-comp.tif

132.05 KB

TIF

blue-tiff-no-comp.tif

796.44 KB

TIF

blue-tiff-zip-comp.tif

404.7 KB

About TIF Format

TIFF (Tagged Image File Format) is a flexible, high-quality raster image format widely used in publishing, photography, and archival applications. TIFF supports both lossy and lossless compression and can store images with high color depths.

TIFF files can contain multiple pages (multi-page TIFF), layers, and extensive metadata. The format supports various color spaces including RGB, CMYK, and LAB, making it essential for professional print workflows.

Common Uses for TIFF Sample Files

  • Print workflow testing - Verify CMYK color handling and prepress software
  • Scanner software validation - Test TIFF output from scanning applications
  • Converter testing - Validate TIFF to JPG, PNG, PDF conversions
  • Archival systems - Test document management and archival software
  • Medical imaging - Verify TIFF handling in medical applications

These TIFF sample files include various compression types and color modes for comprehensive testing.

TIFF Format Specifications

  • File extension: .tif, .tiff
  • MIME type: image/tiff
  • Compression: None, LZW, ZIP, JPEG (lossy)
  • Color depth: 1-bit to 64-bit
  • Features: Multi-page, layers, CMYK, transparency

Frequently Asked Questions

Click the Download button below any sample file to save it directly to your device. No registration or sign-up required.

Yes, all sample TIFF files are completely free to download and use for testing, development, and educational purposes.

TIFF files are often uncompressed or use lossless compression to preserve maximum quality. They also support high bit depths and multiple layers, all contributing to larger file sizes.

Both .tif and .tiff are correct and interchangeable. The shorter .tif extension comes from older Windows systems that limited extensions to 3 characters.

Use TIFF for professional printing, archival storage, or when you need to preserve maximum quality. Use JPEG for web images or when file size is a concern.

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