Pivoter / retourner
Réorienter sans casser l'EXIF
À propos de cet outil
Rotate or flip images. Use the 90° quick-buttons to fix sideways phone photos, or pick any free angle (0-360°) for creative tilts. Mirror horizontally or vertically with one click.
For non-90° rotations Privvert grows the canvas so nothing is cropped. Pick a transparent background (PNG) or a solid color fill. Everything runs in your browser - your photos never leave your device.
Fonctionnalités
- Free rotation 0-360°
- 90° / 180° / 270° quick buttons
- Horizontal flip (mirror) and vertical flip
- Transparent or solid-color fill for the new canvas corners
- PNG, JPG, WebP, AVIF output
- Browser-only - files stay private
- Free and unlimited
- Optional auto-correction based on EXIF orientation
Comment l'utiliser
- Drop in an image.
- Pick a 90° rotation, a flip, or set a custom angle.
- Choose transparent or color fill (for non-90° angles).
- Download the result.
Tout se passe dans votre navigateur grâce à JavaScript et WebAssembly. Vos fichiers ne sont jamais téléversés, jamais stockés et jamais vus par nous.
Questions fréquentes
Yes for non-90° rotations - the bounding box expands so nothing is cut off, and the new corner area is filled with transparency or your chosen color.
Phones write the orientation in the EXIF tag rather than rotating the pixels. Some apps honor that flag, some don't. Rotating with this tool bakes the correct orientation into the pixels themselves.
90° rotations are lossless in PNG. Free angles always involve some interpolation; use a high JPG/WebP quality setting to minimize artifacts.
Yes - the angle input accepts decimals.
Cameras and phones store the original orientation as an EXIF tag rather than rotating the raw pixels. Some viewers respect the tag and rotate on display; others ignore it and show the raw pixels. Use the auto-correction option to bake the orientation into the pixels themselves for consistent display everywhere.
Free-angle rotation adds transparent or colored corners by default; you can also crop to the largest inscribed rectangle to avoid the empty corners.