
I did this twice in order to get the page right-side-up: Of course, you can press Command-R to rotate a page clockwise. Since I wanted to rotate that first page so that it was right-side-up, I clicked on that menu, like this: What isn’t as obvious is the pulldown menu that allows you to rotate and delete pages. When you click on this, a new window opens up with all kinds of options for annotating your PDF. To correct this, I clicked on the edit button on the attachment bar for the PDF: Note that the first page was scanned upside down, and the second page is actually the text of the first page that bled through (thin typing paper) and was interpreted by the scanner as the back of the first page. Here’s a letter I scanned from my grandpa: I figured I’d describe how I’d do it so that you can see how you can do it for yourself.
#EVERNOTE WINDOWS TO ROTATE PDF PAGE MAC#
But since Evernote made it possible to edit your PDFs directly inline (in the Mac version for now), I can take care of this easily from right within the note. I used to rescan all of these documents, which was a pain. Then, too, if the pages are thin, even one sided pages get 2 pages in the scan because the text from one side will bleed through to the other. Occasionally, one page will scan in upside down, while the next page is right-side up.


That said, some types of scans are more difficult for scanners to figure out than others. I scanned all of the pages using my Fujitsu Scansnap s1300i, and in all of those pages, I didn’t have a single jam or problem. The only reason I did it is because we’re getting rid of the filing cabinet to make way for some new furniture. I spent much of my weekend scanning nearly 1,300 pages worth of documents in the filing cabinet.
