Kinetography
Kinetography is the process of recording moving images using a camera to create motion pictures. The term is historical and etymologically combines Greek roots meaning motion and writing. In its early usage, kinetography referred to the photographic capture of motion, particularly with the first motion-picture cameras developed in the 1890s.
The most prominent example is the Kinetograph, a camera built by Thomas Edison with the assistance of
Historically, kinetography sits alongside chronophotography experiments by pioneers such as Eadweard Muybridge and Etienne-Jules Marey, who
In practical terms, recording motion required careful attention to exposure, shutter timing, and inter-frame timing to