The reason I didn't just do that was because I was afraid that rotating
the image would rotate the picture itself. The photo is of me rappelling
and I didn't want to make it look like I'm rappelling sideways. And,
being blind, I would have no way to tell.
What I ended up doing was using the
>
> This indicates that it should be rotated 90 degress clock-wise (I
think). Something in ffmpeg's chain is taking that into consideration,
> and rotating the image, but not reporting it in the console output
>
Moritz is right.
With ffmpeg, you can get that "orientation" info with :
ffprobe -v e
On Tue, Dec 03, 2024 at 11:22:16 -0600, FFmpeg user discussions wrote:
> I am blind but I'm trying to create a promotional video for my disabled rock
> climbing group. I would like to insert a still image into the video. The
> video has resolution 1280:720 so I resized the image to be less than
> 1