SVG — vector graphics — is fundamentally different from JPG. While JPG stores images as a pixel grid, SVG saves graphics as geometric descriptions of geometric shapes. Which means SVG files work at all sizes — from a small icon to a large banner — with no quality loss.
Converting JPG to SVG is a process referred to as raster to vector conversion, and it is very beneficial for illustrations and clean graphics.
Prior to converting JPG to SVG, it is important to understand what happens. JPG files are a pixel-based image — a fixed grid website of pixels. SVG files are a mathematical image — a collection of paths that a browser uses to draw the graphic.
The conversion works great for simple images with distinct shapes and few colors — logos, icons, silhouettes and flat artwork. Results are poor for photographic images with thousands of colors.
For best output, Adobe Illustrator's Image Trace function provides the most precision. Open your JPG in Illustrator, highlight the image, access the Image Trace settings and pick an suitable option.
Visit alljpgconverters.com for a 100 percent free browser-based JPG to SVG tool with no account required.