Hi,
Carol Spears <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> to the best of my knowledge, gimp still does not use exif
> information. while it is perhaps not the best software to introduce
> a newbie to jpegtran is a commandline doey that will do that for
> you.
If the camera actually saves the orientation i
On Wed, Oct 27, 2004 at 05:39:05PM -0400, David A Iacobellis wrote:
>
> I just upgraded to Gimp 2.0.5. Many of the photos I take with my digital
> camera are taken with the camera held vertically. I was told by this mailing
> list that starting with Gimp 2.0.4 the image would be automatically ro
Try right-clicking on the image then "Image/Transform/{flip the way you
want}" instead of "Layer/Transform/{flip the way you want}".
See what that does...
Peace...
Tom
David A
I have used jhead in the past and it is a fast and powerful tool. What I am
trying to do is set another user up with a Linux system. He is newly arrived
from the wonderful world of Windows and is totally intimidated by anything
console. I had hoped Gimp would have included auto orientation or
Hello,
I just upgraded to Gimp 2.0.5. Many of the photos I take with my digital
camera are taken with the camera held vertically. I was told by this mailing
list that starting with Gimp 2.0.4 the image would be automatically rotated
according to the exif data. When I open my photos under Gimp 2
On Wednesday, October 27, 2004 9:35 PM [GMT+1=CET],
Serge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Used to work with photoshop, for instance when i want to take
someone's hand in one picture and to put it in another one, i chose
my selection , copied it and pasted it into the second picture, and
then I could res
Hi
Used to work with photoshop, for instance when i want to take someone's hand
in one picture and to put it in another one, i chose my selection , copied it
and pasted it into the second picture, and then I could resize it [bigger or
smaller], transform it to ajust it to my wills.
How can i do