Originally posted by: GhostAlpha26after I have corrected the frames how do I re-import them back into the DVD? Just one at a time or is there another way to do that? And should I use womble to mesh the project together?
I know I’m being a real nag but this means the world to me thank you so much.
51 views, so these answers are helping other people, too.
Use VirtualDubMod to reassemble the images into an avi.
(First, make sure the image filenames are absolutely consitant, because VirtualDubMod gets confused with filenames, very easily).
Save as Huffyuv, which is lossless, then use TMPGEnc to turn that into Mpeg2.
I tried putting the Huffyuv avi directly into Womble, once, but Womble misinterpreted the aspect ratio. I might've missed something, tho'.
Give the mpeg2 the highest possible bitrate, to preserve the quality. Let your DVD software decide the final bitrates of everything.
Put the mpeg2 into Womble, and splice it into the DVD footage. You can use the DVD audio to replace the sound in your clip.
Make sure it syncs up.
Read "ADigitalMan's Guide to MPEG2/AC3 Editing", stickied above, for the full procedure.
By the way: Export the whole scene (camera shot), into the image sequence, because color shifts can happen when decoding, encoding, and recoding. You don't want the color shift to happen in the middle of the shot.

One possible drawback with using Image Editors... I haven't upgraded to the latest and greatest, yet...
But so far, the image editors I use insist on position-moving one-pixel-at-a-time. (I might be neglecting an option somewhere).
If there's camera movement, you often need to position your clean image to partial-pixel accuracy.
That's where AE Pro comes in, its manual positioning and motion-tracking use partial-pixel positioning.
Tuckuh, I was having some problems with that tutorial (I think I just suck at AE) but I think many of those other tutorials will really help me, thank you