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How to Rotate movie Clips in Windows Media?

Asked Mar 6, 2009, 02:50 PM — 5 Answers
Movie clips I've shot in a vertical format with my still camera are horizontal both in "my images" and when I open them with windows media. How can I rotate them ninety degrees and save in Windows Media or anywhere else for that matter?

5 Answers
Nubzor16's Avatar
Nubzor16 Posts: 62, Reputation: 9
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#2

Mar 7, 2009, 01:52 AM
What format are the Images in?
If in jpg,gif,bmp...etc use windows image and fax viewer and use rotate icon and click save.
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Pregunta's Avatar
Pregunta Posts: 177, Reputation: 10
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#3

Mar 7, 2009, 08:42 AM
Thank you. However I can't find "windows image and fax viewer" on the list of programs on this computer. Could it have another name?
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Nubzor16's Avatar
Nubzor16 Posts: 62, Reputation: 9
Junior Member
 
#4

Mar 7, 2009, 04:39 PM
You should be able to dbl click image file and by default it should open in windows image and fax viewer

If not

Right click on a jpeg/jpg file and in the menu should be the Open in Windows..
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RTdammer's Avatar
RTdammer Posts: 3, Reputation: 1
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#5

Mar 9, 2009, 11:13 AM
You should be able to right click on the file before opening in windows explorer and rotate as needed.
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Perito's Avatar
Perito Posts: 3,141, Reputation: 781
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#6

Mar 10, 2009, 04:59 AM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pregunta View Post
Movie clips I've shot in a vertical format with my still camera are horizontal both in "my images" and when I open them with windows media. How can I rotate them ninety degrees and save in Windows Media or anywhere else for that matter?
All of the answers above seem to be pointed toward single-frame pictures. "Image and Fax Viewer" is not intended to open AVI files, MPG files or other types of "movie clips".

The only way I know of to rotate AVI files is to write a program to separate the file into single frames -- split out the single frames into separate files; rotate the frames one at a time (programmatically -- there's no way you're going to do it manually) and reassemble them into an AVI file.

It's probably possible to do this with other types of movie files, but I have no experience with them.

In other words, it's probably not going to be easy. You might be able to find a program on the Internet, that is designed to do it.
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