

You might have to do a batch run and rotate all of the images outside of MC before import. There are EXIF editors out there, but as I don't currently use one there's none I can specifically recommend.

Most image processing applications and viewers do use the EXIF data, so they rotate the image on display to landscape. MC does NOT process the EXIF data, so it sees just the raw image (portrait). Welcome to homepage info - get ready to check Colorpilot best content for Russia right away, or after learning these important things about Two Pilots - :. Now depending on whether or not an application reads and processes the EXIF data determines how the image will be displayed. What you have is a portrait picture which has been rotated to display as landscape. For a rotated image (which is what you normally get when you take a picture in portrait position) the mode is Landscape with the 0,0 being the bottom left.

For a normal landscape image, it would be marked as Landscape with the 0,0 point being the top left. The EXIF data (which contains the metadata about the image) has the image flagged as being taken in Portrait orientation, with the 0,0 point being the bottom left corner of the image.
