Convert ODP Presentation to JPG Online

Convert OpenDocument Presentation files to JPG images.

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ODP (OpenDocument Presentation) is the native presentation format for LibreOffice Impress and Apache OpenOffice Impress, standardized under ISO/IEC 26300. The file is a ZIP archive holding slide XML, master slide definitions, embedded media, and theme references. It's the default save format in Impress on every Linux distribution and is mandated in many European and South American government environments where Microsoft PowerPoint dependence is explicitly prohibited. Educational institutions in Germany, Brazil, and India often ship ODP curricula materials.

Converting ODP to JPG rasterizes each slide as one JPG at the presentation's set slide size - typically 1920x1080 for modern 16:9 decks, 1024x768 for legacy 4:3, or custom for poster decks. Embedded images, charts, SmartArt-equivalents (Impress diagrams), shapes, text boxes, and master slide backgrounds all render as they appear in Impress's slide-show view. Animations, transitions, and slide-by-slide builds collapse to their final state since JPG is static. Speaker notes are stripped (they live on the notes view, not the slide).

Teachers preparing handouts from Impress decks, conference presenters sharing slides on platforms that reject .odp uploads, and government communications staff distributing ministerial briefings as image carousels are typical audiences. For editable handoff to PowerPoint use Impress's File > Save As > .pptx. For sharing animations export to MP4 from File > Export > Video first, then frame-extract. Slide dimensions match the canvas: a 1920x1080 deck produces 1920x1080 JPGs, scalable up via the master Slide Properties.

ODP is the presentation format of the OpenDocument family standardized by OASIS in 2005 and ISO/IEC 26300 in 2006. Its lineage traces to StarOffice Impress, acquired by Sun in 1999 and open-sourced as OpenOffice.org. The format is a ZIP archive containing content.xml, styles.xml, master slide definitions, and embedded media. ODP is the default of LibreOffice Impress, accepted by Microsoft PowerPoint since 2007 with degradation of animations, and used heavily by open-source conferences, European governments, and educational institutions that mandate vendor-neutral formats. Converting to JPG produces a venue-proof slide sequence playable on any device.

ODPJPG
File format .odp (OpenDocument Presentation) .jpg (one per slide)
Transitions / animations Full Impress animation support Lost - static frames
Recipient requirements LibreOffice / Impress installed Universal image viewer
Slide model Editable masters, layouts, placeholders Rasterized to fixed-pixel image
Output size Single .odp file N slide JPGs (typically 300-800 KB each)
  1. Build the 28-slide deck in LibreOffice Impress with Liberation Sans throughout for font portability
  2. Venue laptop is a locked-down Windows machine with no Impress and no admin rights
  3. Convert the .odp to JPG at 1920x1080, one slide per image, embedding the rendered fonts
  4. Upload the JPG sequence to a USB drive and walk through it as a fullscreen image viewer slideshow
  5. Share the PDF render and original .odp on the conference repo for attendees to download
Use caseSettings
Venue projector backup
Conference handout (print)
Talk recap / blog
Streaming overlay
Cross-platform archive
PlatformODPJPG
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ODP (OpenDocument Presentation) is the native presentation format for LibreOffice Impress and Apache OpenOffice Impress - The open-standard equivalent of PPTX. Converting ODP slides to JPG exports each slide as a raster image that can be shared, embedded, and repurposed anywhere that accepts standard images, without any dependency on LibreOffice or open-source office software at the recipient's end.

Educators and trainers who build course presentations in LibreOffice Impress convert individual slides to JPG for embedding in course materials, handout PDFs, and online learning platforms. LMS systems including Moodle, Canvas, and Blackboard accept JPG images natively in their content editors, making it straightforward to include slide visuals in course pages without converting to PPTX first.

Open-source advocates and Linux users who create presentations in LibreOffice for internal use sometimes need to share specific slide content with external audiences who use Microsoft Office. Converting ODP slides to JPG eliminates compatibility concerns entirely - Anyone can view a JPG, regardless of their operating system, office suite preference, or device.

  • Set a custom slide size before designing if your target is LinkedIn (1080x1080) or Instagram (1080x1350) - resizing after layout breaks alignment.
  • Hide background images on title slides via Slide > Slide Properties > Background for a clean white export suitable for print handouts.
  • Animations and builds collapse to their final visible state - design slides that read sensibly without animation if you'll be exporting to JPG.
  • Use the Outline view in Impress to verify text content survives the export - decorative text inside grouped shapes sometimes renders unexpectedly.
  • For multilingual decks, embed fonts via Tools > Options > Load/Save > General > Embed Fonts to ensure CJK and Cyrillic characters render correctly on conversion servers.
Exports every ODP slide as a separate numbered JPG image
Slide layout, fonts, and embedded images preserved in the output
No PowerPoint or Keynote license required for conversion
Files auto-deleted after 24 hours, nothing stored permanently
ODP

ODP – OpenDocument Presentation

ODP is a specialised image format. Converting to JPG provides wider compatibility and easier sharing across applications and platforms.
JPG

JPG – Joint Photographic Experts Group

JPG (JPEG) is the world's most compatible image format - Supported on every device, browser, printer, and application. Lossy compression keeps file sizes small.
JPG Converter
  • Each slide exports as a separate JPG numbered sequentially — ideal for creating slide thumbnails or sharing individual slides.
  • Use 150 DPI for screen use and social media; 300 DPI for print-quality slide exports.
  • If the presentation uses embedded fonts, they are rendered correctly during conversion — no font substitution.

Yes - PowerPoint 2010 and later read and write ODP with reasonable fidelity for slides, basic shapes, and text. Complex features (Impress-specific transitions, advanced animations, custom slide masters) may not round-trip. For perfect compatibility export from Impress as .pptx via File > Save As.

No - JPG is static. Each slide exports with all builds revealed and all transitions complete. For animation-heavy decks export to MP4 via Impress's File > Export > Video and use that for sharing motion, or share the original ODP with a recipient who has Impress / LibreOffice.

Any size set in the Impress presentation - common defaults are 4:3 (1024x768 or 10x7.5in), 16:9 widescreen (1920x1080), and 16:10. Custom sizes for portrait posters, square social posts, and Instagram-friendly dimensions all work. The JPG output matches the slide canvas dimensions exactly.

No - speaker notes live on the notes view in Impress, not on the slide itself, so they don't appear in the JPG output. To export notes alongside slides, use Impress's File > Export As PDF with the Notes Pages option enabled, then run PDF-to-JPG on the result.

Roughly 0.5-2 seconds per slide depending on embedded media complexity. A typical 30-slide deck completes in 15-60 seconds. Decks with high-resolution embedded videos or many vector charts take longer because each frame is rasterized at the slide's output resolution.