Premiere Elements rotates Portrait Photos in PhotoShop Elements SlideShow

Is there a way to keep the subject rotation from occuring when a SlideShow is passed from PhotoShop to Premiere?

Hi, MGW. Not many people here use PRE, so you'd probably get more answers in the PRE forum:
http://forums.adobe.com/community/premiere/premiere_elements
Good luck.

Similar Messages

  • Portrait photo orientation issue when viewed in slideshow

    I have experienced this problem since first upgrading to 8.0. I have upgraded to 8.02, but this problem persists.
    Most (but not all) of my portrait photos display incorrectly during slideshows (but display correctly otherwise). The pictures are rotated 90 degrees and are squished vertically and stretched horizontally. The result are pictures that fill a portrait oriented "frame" but are sideways, squat and stretched width-wise.
    As near as I can tell, all my photos that I took with my digital cameras (all Canons of various models) have this problem, while only some photos I have received from friends have this issue. Perhaps it is an issue with iPhoto reading Canon's orientation flag? But why is it only a problem in slideshows?
    I'm uncertain if this is relevant, but I've also noticed none of my portrait photos display properly when viewed via Front Row.
    So far the only trouble shooting ideas I've been able to think of are:
    1 - Remake my slideshows from scratch
    2 - Rebuild my photo library.
    Neither of these fixed my problem. Does anyone have a suggestion?

    Try quitting iPhoto and trashing your iPhoto preferences file ("your username" ==> library ==> preferences ==> con.apple.iPhoto.plist) when you launch iPhoto a new default one will be created - reset any user preferences you have changed and repoint iPhoto to the library if you have moved it
    LN

  • Portrait Photos appear as Landscape Photos in Premiere Elements 9

    I created a photo slideshow in Photoshop Elements 9.  I then selected the slideshow, clicked on the 'Create' tab and selected make a DVD.  Once the slideshow was in the Premiere Elements 9 application, I did a 'Preview' and several of the photos formatted as 'Portrait' appeared distorted (compressed top to bottom) and appreared in the 'Landscape' format.  How can I correct this problem?

    How were the Portrait Still Images Rotated?
    If done in a viewing/cataloging program, like Organizer, that rotation was only for display, and the actual pixels have not been altered yet. They are still just as they were, when recorded in the camera. The actual Rotation needs to be done in, say Photoshop Elements, or in PrE with the Fixed Effect>Rotation.
    If you are creating the SlideShow other than on the Timeline in PrE, you will want to actually Rotate the Images.
    Good luck,
    Hunt

  • Rotate Photos in Premiere Elements 9

    I created several photo slideshows on Adobe Photoshop Elements 9.  I went to create a DVD with Adobe Premiere Elements 9 with slideshow to be a chapter.  When the slideshows were moved into the Adobe Premiere Elements 9 to create menus and burn the DVD, several of the photos in different slideshows were rotated 90 degrees.
    Question:  How do I rotate individual photos to the correct orientation?

    This "problem" bites many users. The "answer" is that in cataloging apps, such as Organizer, there is the capability to alter how an images DISPLAYS, but that does NOT alter the pixels in any way. PrE will see the pixels, and ignore the metadata on the display. This ARTICLE goes into more detail. The "fix" is to actually Rotate the Images, to rearrange their pixels, and then Save the file. This is easily done in Photoshop, or Photoshop Elements.
    Good luck,
    Hunt

  • I am using elements & premiere 12 on my PC using windows 7.  My problem is that photos in portrait view in slideshow are OK but when I move the slideshow to premiere to edit included video the portrait photos turn side-on and stretch when still in portrai

    I am using elements & premiere 12 on my PC using windows 7.  My problem is that photos in portrait view in slideshow are OK but when I move the slideshow to premiere to edit included video the portrait photos turn side-on and stretch when still in portrait view.  Is there any way to prevent this from happening?  Any comments would be appreciated.

    Bruce369
    What is the Output option that you are selecting for the transfer of the Elements Organizer 12/12.1 slideshow to Premiere Elements 12/12.1 Editor?
    If you are using Edit with Premiere Elements output option, are you using the Premiere Elements command to break apart the Elements Organizer slideshow and then applying rotation to the portrait files? Or, it is this more than just a photo rotation matter?
    More on this in the morning.
    Please review and consider.
    Thank you.
    ATR

  • Image rotation in Photoshop and Premiere Elements 9

    I have used Photoshop Elements in the past to create slideshows, then edited them with Premiere Elements.  Since I installed version 9, I now have a problem with rotated images.  The images I rotate in Photoshop do not show up as rotated in Premiere.  I went to preferences in Photoshop and unchecked the box for JPEG orientation, which rotated the image on my hard drive.  Now, the image appears rotated in Premiere but it is distorted.  Is there a solution for displaying the rotated images correctly in both applications?

      Normally if you click Output à Edit With Premier Elements from the slideshow editor your project is normally sent to the PRE timeline with the same orientation.
    In PRE you can right click on the slideshow clip and choose break apart. If you then click in the main window a bounding box will appear around your frame. You can then hover your cursor around the corner until the double arrow appears and rotate in any direction.
     

  • I downloaded and installed Photoshop Elements & Premiere Elements.  I then launched Photoshop Elements Organizer and imported approx. 28,000 photos (including some videos).  A window opened indicating that many of the photos had tags, and asking if I want

    I downloaded and installed Photoshop Elements & Premiere Elements.  I then launched Photoshop Elements Organizer and imported approx. 28,000 photos (including some videos).  A window opened indicating that many of the photos had tags, and asking if I wanted to add the tags.  I said yes, and the process began.  When it reached 60% a window opened indicating that "Elements 13 Organizer has stopped working", with the only option being to "Close program."
    I've since tried to open organizer several times, but it goes immediately to "Elements 13 Organizer has stopped working".  I was able to open Editor, and tried opening Organizer from Editor, but encountered the same problem.
    FYI, I have an open case (#0214505556), but have not received the help I need.

    This issue is with respect to Elements 13.

  • How do I rotate photos in photoshop elements

    how do I rotate photos in photoshop elements?
    These show as rotated in the organizer, but revert to unrotated when sent to Elements.

    By launching your PSE Editor and then going to:
    Image  >> Rotate
    See this picture:
    Good luck with your rotation.

  • Stills rotated in premiere elements 10

    Hello everyone. Can anyone help me with a problem I'm having with Photoshop Elements 10 /Premiere Elements 10? I'm making a slideshow consisting of video and stills. Upon moving the project from photo elements to prem elements some but not all of my stills have been rotated right 90 degrees. What's going on and how do I fix it?
    Thanks in advance.

    Mr. Hackonabike
    Although your Premiere Elements 10 is running on Windows 7 64 bit as a 64 bit application, your results are pointing to you stressing out the system with grossly oversized stills (and 290 of them). As appropriate, resize or crop resize to 1920 x 1080 16:9. Use of those high resolution photos typically do not get you better end product quality and only serve to stress out the program as it attempts to reduce them to the sizing of the format.
    This is my suggestion....
    If your stills are 16:9, then resize them to 1920 x 1080 and use them in the Elements Organizer Slideshow Editor if you prefer to build the slideshow there.
    If your stills are 3:2 or 4:3, then crop resize them to 1920 x 1080 maintaining the 16:9 and then use them in the Elements Organizer Slideshow Editor.
    When you do go to output the slideshow from the Elements Organizer 10 Slideshow Editor, use the Output command Edit With Premiere Elements Editor.
    But before you hit the output choice, open Premiere Elements 10 and make sure that you set the project preset in the new project dialog as
    PAL
    DSLR
    1080p
    DSLR 1080p25
    Then output the slideshow from the Elements Organizer 10 Slideshow Editor to the opened Premiere Elements 10 with the project preset you just set.
    If you decide that you want to do some more significant edits of the slideshow in Premiere Elements, right click the .psess video version of the intact slideshow that was placed automatically on your Timeline in the transfer from Elements Organizer to Premiere Elements, and select Break Apart Elements Organizer Slideshow.
    Add disc menus if you want. Do not bother with stop markers if your destination is a burn to Blu-ray disc. Stop markers do not function in the playback of the Blu-ray disc.
    Then Share/Disc/Blu-ray and select your appropriate preset.
    How much installed and available RAM does your computer have and how much free hard drive space does you computer have. You want to make sure
    that the Premiere Elements scratch disks are directed to a hard drive save location with enough space to accept them. See Edit Menu/Preferences/Scratch Disks.
    Some can get away with letting the program do the resizing, some cannot. Level of computer resources is a major factor.
    Please review and consider. Any questions, please ask.
    Thanks.
    ATR
    Add On...In future project, you might want to consider building the slideshow in Premiere Elements, followed by the burn to there.

  • Transfer problem from Photoshop Elements 9 to Premiere Elements 9

    When I transfer a slideshow from Photoshop Elements 9 to Premiere Elements 9, some slides change orientation and appear compressed. How can I avoid this problem?
    Also when transfering  from Photoshop Elements, Premiere Elements opens a window to record the name of the project; what is the proper setting for the project? DSLR, interface DV...?
    Recording a Blueray with Premiere elements from sequences of slideshows saved as WMV (highest resolution 1024x768) , pictures do not fill the screen. I realize that the photo size (4:3) is different from the TV screen (16:9), and that cropping would be necessary to fill the screen, but is there a format WMV for wide screen or can Premiere Elements do the cropping?  A wide screen ratio would be nice to have in Photoshop Elements cropping toll.
    Thanks for any help you can provide.

    One problem with orientation is that many viewing/cataloging programs will allow one to change the orientation, but that is only for viewing - no pixels are actually changed. A flag is placed in the metadata, telling many viewers to rotate the image, when viewed. Adobe Bridge, the big-brother to Organizer, and installed with many Adobe suites and programs, does this. It is not until one does a Save for the image, that the rotation is actually applied to the pixels. Until then, it's just an instruction to a viewer on how to display the image.
    I second Steve's comments on the Scaling of stills, outside of PrE, prior to Import. This ARTICLE will give you some background and some tips for automating the process.
    Good luck,
    Hunt

  • Photoshop Premiere Elements Image sizing for DVD

    Any way to prevent photos from being cropped/off screen when viewing on TV. Formated both 4:3 & 16:9 and bottom of 'portrait' layout images are often cropped. Happens on older long thin scanned photographs (approx 3" x 5") from the 40's & 50's?

    Bluestar06
    I think that this question is better asked on the forum specific to Premiere Elements at
    http://forums.adobe.com/community/premiere_elements
    When you repost there I suggest that you
    -- include the actual photo file dimensions (height and width) for your scanned Portrait mode photos
    -- say whether you plan to do any pan and zoom within this type of photo
    -- identify which version of Premiere Elements you are using
    -- more details about your desired outout format - like will it be a Standard Defintion DVD or will it be an HD format  ?
    Now theoretically within the Photoshop Elements Editor you could create a new landscape shape photo file (for each photo) where you placed your portrait mode photo on a background shaped for 4:3 or 16:9 as needed and then save a new photo specifically file for use in the Premiere Elements show.  However, this approach is probably not best if you plant to use pan/zoom and there are many other alternatives within Premiere Elements.

  • Is there a way to create and edit a video in portrait mode / 9:16 in Premiere Elements 12 or 13. Playback on an iPhone in portrait position.

    I'm editing iPhone app video for posting as the first screen in the Apple app store. Required size for the video is 750:1334, 9:16. I there a way to setup the initial video in portrait mode? Many posts for how to rotate a specific clip, but I need the whole video in portrait position. How to accomplish this? I'm using Windows 7 and Premiere Elements 12 and now 13.

    LaurieFrick
    Thanks for giving this portrait Edit area monitor shape a look.
    I have Windows 7 64 bit and Windows 8.1 64 bit and have done the work using Premiere Elements 12/12.1 on Windows 7 64 bit.
    Here is a step by step
    Find the DSLR [email protected] file
    Local Disk C\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe Premiere Elements 12\Settings\SequencePresets\NTSC\DSLR\1080p\
    And, in that 1080p Folder is the DSLR 1080p30@ 29.97.sqpreset file that you seek.
    1. Copy the
    DSLR 1080p30@ 29.9.sqpreset fileI
    and paste it to the computer desktop in a newly created folder named 1920p.
    2. Open the 1920p Folder and edit the ..sqpreset file in Notepad.
    To do that right click the .sqpreset, and, from the pop up, select Open With and then Notepad.
    3. In the Notepad document, you are going to edit in only 2 places for now, switching 1920 and 1080 to 1080 and 1920 at the top and bottom
    sections of the Notepad document.
    Then go specifically File Menu/Save of the Notepad document and hit Save.
    4. At this point, you have the edited.sqpreset file in the 1920p Folder on the computer desktop.
    (Change the name of the edited .sqpreset file so that it = DSLR [email protected])
    Move the 1920p Folder from there to add it to the 1080p Folder, the location where you found the original .sqpreset file that you edited.
    Close out of there.
    5. Back in the Premiere Elements 12/12.1, manually set the project preset to the new project preset
    6. When you import your 1080 x 1920 9:16 video file into the project and drag it into the Timeline, you should see
    Note that there is no orange line over that Timeline content, indicating that you are seeing
    the best possible preview of the image.
    7. As I wrote before,
    But, here is the hang up. If I render the Timeline content to get the best possible preview at the Edit level, the video in the Edit area monitor
    squeezes in resulting in black borders to the left and right of the video image on screen.
    But, otherwise I found I had no problems editing or exporting, just had to keep away from Timeline rendering for previewing after an edit. Need to find the missing ingredient for 100%.
    I will be writing this up in my blog in a more organized fashion including how I got the project preset description in Change Settings to agree with the changes. Probably I will do that in the morning.
    ATR

  • What do i do with a very slow Photoshop Elements and Premiere Elements on a PC?

    I seem to be getting mixed opinions as to why my Adobe software gets so slow, despite efforts to avoid that, but my computer seems to be working just fine, it is only when in Adobe that the problems arise, like freezing, taking longer and longer periods of time to open the screen to edit a photo, or to compare two photos side by side.  Any process seems to take such a long time, and the freezing can last for several minutes, and then continue on.    I have had a computer person come to my house and examine my computer and though his knowledge of Photoshop is limited, he feels that it is NOT the computer but something with Adobe Photoshop.  I would tend to agree with him.   
    Several theories have been explained to me, such as Elements and Premiere Elements are a low end of the scale of Photoshop programs, so it is just not going to be able to process high definition large photos well and quickly.  Stating comments like i can only use 2 GB of my memory even though i have 8 GB, so unless i can use 64 bit this is what i have to deal with, and it is just a way for Photoshop to say you need to upgrade to the fancier programs.  I do not need fancier programs.  I am working hard to master these, and have accomplished 4 great blu rays in high definition thanks to recommendations from the Forum here, especially Steve with the help of his books. 
    Others say i need a solid state hard drive to solve the problem.  Others say the only way i will ever solve the problem is to switch to a MAC.  Others state is a mal-ware problem, but i have never had my hard drive so clean and uncluttered.  I supposedly have as good of PC as i could have as far as QUAD-core, 8GB memory, presently a 1 TB hard drive less than 1/2 full.   All suggestions involve big outlays of money, with no guarantee that things will be any better.  I have tried to contact different computer companies and computer 'nerds', and these are some of the suggestions, but no one really has a lot of knowledge of the Photoshop software. 
    I am thinking of adding an additional internal hard drive, but not sure that is going to help either.  Could i put all my Photoshop of the second hard drive, and might that speed things up? 
    Adobe is rather worthless in trying to get help from them.  I have spent hours on the phone waiting and then talking to someone who says they understand English but they do NOT understand the question i am asking, which becomes very frustrating with repeat phone calls.  I gave up yesterday trying to do that challenging experience yesterday after i had spent 3 times the amount of time they said i would need to wait to get a reply, and i was at work, and my free time had come to an end.  So i am hoping you guys can give me some clues of the best thing to do.
    Is it true that Photoshop Elements and Premiere Elements are just such a lower end program that trying to do things in high definition, with 2000x1500 photos, making them into a blu ray disc is a major challenge with a PC?  I wish i had a greater computer knowledge, but i have struggled to achieve my goal, but the speed of it all gets very frustrating, though it is possible. 
    Another question asked which i don't think exists, is whether there is a program that could clean up Photoshop, or are there some clues that could accomplish that and thereby speed things up.
    Would appreciate any suggestions anyone has.  I am in the middle of another project so now is probably not the best time to consider any major changes.  But any comments would be appreciated.
    Ron

      Premiere Elements 10 is now 64 bit, but not PSE10.
    Take a look at your scratch disk set-up and if you have a spare volume, allocate that first before the C drive. Elements use scratch disks when it gets low on RAM.
    Click image to enlarge
    Turn off face recognition and the auto-analyzer to improve performance.
    When editing photos or videos check the task manager to see what background processes may be running and end them temporarily if not needed.

  • I have Adobe Photoshop Elements 12 & Premiere Elements 12 for windows.  I want to transfer the programs to my new HP 15 Touch Screen computer.   Then I wan to remove the program from my old HP computer.  How can I do this?

    I transferred the files to my new computer but not sure how I get the Photoshop & Premier Elements to work.  What do I do once I have all the files transferred?

    Just install them on the new computer. You can sign  out of Premiere Elements/Photo Elements on your old computer -- but signing in on your new computer activates the programs.
    You can be activated on two computers on a single license for these programs.

  • Performance problems when using Premiere Elements for photo slideshows

    Hello,
    I had been using Premiere Elements 9 (PE9) to make a simple slideshow for my parents from their vacation trip and I ran into some serious performance problems.  I had used it to create similar projects before, but not nearly as big.  This one is like 260 photos, so basically it is 260 seperate clips.  I have a POWERHOUSE workstation (see below) so it isn't my PC.  Even when PE9 crashes, looking at my performance monitor my CPU and RAM aren't even halfway being utilized.  I finally switched to Windows Movie Maker of all things and it worked seemlessly, amazing really.  I'm wondering if I was just using PE9 for something other than what it was designed for since there weren't really any video clips, just a ton of photos that I made into video clips, if that makes sense.  Based upon my experience with this so far, I can't imagine using PE9 anymore for anything really.  I might have the need for a more professional video editing program in the near future, although it does seem like PE has a lot of features.  How can I make sure it utilizes my workstation to its full potential?  Here are my specs:
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    Intel Core i7-2600K 4.6 GHz Overclocked
    ASUS P8P67 Deluxe Motherboard
    AMD Firepro V8800 Video Card
    Crucial 128 GB SATA 6Gb/s Solid State Drive (Operating System)
    Corsair Vengeance 16GB (4x4GB) Memory
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    Corsair Professional Series Gold AX850 Power Supply
    Graphite Series 600T Mid-Tower Case
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    Western Digital Caviar Black 2 TB SATA III Hard Drive
    Western Digital Green 3 TB SATA III Hard Drive
    Logitech Wireless Gaming Mouse G700
    I don’t play any games but it’s a great productivity mouse with 13 customizable buttons
    Wacom Intuos5 Pen Tablet
    Yes, this system is blazingly fast.  I have yet to feel it slow down, even with Photoshop, Lightroom, InDesign, Illustrator and numerous other apps running at the same time.  HOWEVER, Premiere Elements 9 has crashed NUMERUOS times, every time my system wasn't even close to being fully taxed. 
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    Andy,
    There ARE some differences between PrE and PrPro w/ an approved CUDA-capable and MPE hardware acceleration-enabled nVidia video card, but those differences show up ONLY in the quality of the Scaling. The processing overhead is almost exactly the same, when it comes to handling the extra pixels.
    As of PrPro CS 5, two things changed:
    The max. size of Still Images went up from 4096 x 4096 pixels, to quite a bit larger (cannot recall the numbers now).
    The Scaling algorithms have been improved, though ONLY with the correct nVidia cards, with MPE hardware support enabled.
    Now, there CAN be another consideration, between the two programs, in that PrPro CS 5 - CS 6, are 64-bit ONLY, so one benefits from the computer and OS to run it. PrE can be either 32-bit, or 64-bit, so one might, or might not, be taking advantage of the 64-bit program and OS. Still, the processing overhead will be almost identical, it's just that the 64-bit OS can spread it around a bit.
    I still recommend Scaling the large Still Images in PS, prior to Import, to keep that processing overhead as low as is possible. Scaled Still Images work just fine, and I have one Project with 3000+ Scaled Still Images, that edits just fine in PrPro, even on my older 32-bit workstation. Testing that same machine, and PrPro some years ago, I could ONLY work with up to 5 - 4096 x 4096 Stills, before things ground to a crawl.
    Now, Adobe AfterEffects handles large Still Images differently, so I just moved that test Project to AE, and added another 20 large Images, which edited just fine. IIRC, AE can handle Still Images up to 10K x 10K pixels, and that might have gone up, as of CS 5.
    Good luck, and hope that helps,
    Hunt

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