I haven't done sheet film that much but don't the knotches go top right and not bottom left
Top right
Is bottom left... Kind of.
You only have to care about which
side of the film is 'facing out', but you don't need to worry about how the film is rotated. Notches on the right side of the top edge are the same as the notches being on the bottom of the right side edge, or the left side of the bottom edge, or the top of the left hand edge. [Assuming you are looking at the front of the film, ie, where you should see if you looked down the lens.]
Basically, stick a pin through the middle of the film, and give it a spin - The film will still work, no matter what direction the 'notch' ends up pointing towards, barring having a hole in the middle of the frame.
If you flip the film over so you're looking down on the back side, then the notches flip corners.
When loading my film holders I put the notches toward the flap, opposite the dark slide handle, so that I can double check that I hadn't somehow flipped the film over before I close up. However I've met several photographers who apparently load the film rotated 180 with the notches going towards the darkslide handle end... But I have no idea which, if either, is considered 'the norm'. [I want to say that loading them with the notch on the end you can feel before closing the holder up is normal, but humans are weird and do things in odd ways, and for all I know I'm the weird one.]
The important thing is that the film is 'facing the light', and whatever works for a photographer is what works.