What is the difference between .mit and .fpx?
- Extension
- .mit
- .fpx
- Category
- Embroidery
- Raster Image
- Developer
- Mitsubishi
- Kodak
- Description
- MIT is a proprietary file format used for embroidery designs and sewing machine control software. It is used primarily by Mitsubishi sewing machines, and certain other brands that are compatible with the MIT format. It contains information about the thread colors, number of stitches, and other data that is necessary to create an embroidered design.
- The FPX (FlashPix Bitmap Image File) format is a type of image file designed to support high-resolution photographs and images. Developed in the mid-1990s by a consortium including Kodak, Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard, and Live Picture Inc., the FPX format is based on the Image Content Architecture (ICA), which allows it to store multiple resolutions of an image within a single file. This makes it especially useful for efficiently viewing and editing images without requiring the full image file.
- MIME Type
- application/x-mitsubishi-sew
- image/vnd.fpx
- Sample
- sample.fpx
- Wikipedia
- .fpx on Wikipedia