Fix a folder of mis-oriented photos in seconds
Phones, cameras and scanners record EXIF orientation tags, but not every viewer respects them — so half your photos end up sideways when you share them. This tool is the fastest way to bake the correct rotation into the pixels themselves: drop a folder, pick 90° clockwise (the usual fix for portrait-mode phone photos), and download the corrected batch.
Quick presets, custom angles, or both
Three big quick buttons cover the everyday rotations: 90° left, 90° right and 180°. For straightening a tilted horizon or producing a diagonal layout, tick Custom angle and drag the slider from −360° to +360°. The number input next to the slider gives you single-degree precision.
Gap fill for non-90° rotations
When you rotate by an angle that isn't a multiple of 90°, the image no longer fills its bounding rectangle — there are triangular gaps at each corner. The colour you pick from the gap-fill swatch fills those gaps. Pick the colour of your eventual background (white for printing on paper, black for cinema posters, the page colour for embedding into a slide). Set the output format to PNG and the gaps stay transparent — useful when you'll composite the rotated image onto another layer later.
Orientation filter
Camera roll exports often mix landscape, portrait and square shots — and you usually only want to fix one orientation. The orientation filter limits the rotation to files matching the chosen shape: Landscape for wider-than-tall, Portrait for taller-than-wide, Square for equal sides, or All to apply the rotation to everything. Files outside the selected orientation are marked Skipped.
Bulk download as a ZIP
For batches of 2 or more, the Download button switches to "Download all as ZIP" so the rotated files land in your downloads folder as a single archive. Single-file batches download straight away with the original name plus a -rotated suffix.