Further reading
- Anthony, B. (1996). The Kinora: Motion Pictures for the Home 1896-1914: a History of the System. The Projection Box.
- Brown, R., & Anthony, B. (1999). A Victorian Film Enterprise: The History of the British Mutoscope and Biograph Company. Flicks Books.
- Herbert, S. (1989). Animated Portrait Photography. History of Photography, 13(1), 65–78.
- Lumière, A., Lumière, L., & Mills, B. J. B. (1896). Kinora Lumière Patent: “Apparatus for the Direct Viewing of Chrono-Photographic or Zoetropic Pictures”. British Patent No: 23,183.
- Talbot, F. A. (1914). Moving Pictures: How They are Made and Worked. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Co.; http://archive.org/details/movingpicturesho00talb
- van der Heijden, T. (2023). The Kinora: the first home cinema technology, Europeana, 20 September 2023. https://www.europeana.eu/en/blog/the-kinora-the-first-home-cinema-technology
- van der Heijden, T., & Kuypers, V. (2023). Life in Motion: A History of Amateur Film. Europeana. https://www.europeana.eu/en/exhibitions/life-in-motion
- van der Heijden, T., & Wolf, C. (2022). Replicating the Kinora: 3D Modelling and Printing as Heuristics in Digital Media History. Journal of Digital History, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1515/jdh-2021-1009