Although emerging powered prostheses can enable people with lower-limb amputation to walk and climb stairs over different task conditions (e.g., speeds and inclines), the control architecture typically uses a finite-state machine to switch between activity-specific controllers. Because these controllers focus on steady-state locomotion, powered prostheses abruptly switch between controllers during gait transitions rather than continuously adjusting leg biomechanics in synchrony with the users. This paper introduces a new framework for powered prosthesis control by modeling the lower-limb joint kinematics over a continuum of variable-incline walking and stair climbing, including steady-state and transitional gaits. Steady-state models for walking and stair climbing represent joint kinematics as continuous functions of gait phase, forward speed, and incline. Transition models interpolate kinematics as convex combinations of the two steady-state models, with an additional term to account for kinematics that fall outside their convex hull. The coefficients of this convex combination denote the similarity of the transitional kinematics to each steady-state mode, providing insight into how able-bodied individuals continuously transition between ambulation modes. Cross-validation demonstrates that the model predictions of untrained kinematics have errors within the range of physiological variability for all joints. Simulation results demonstrate the model's robustness to incline estimation and mode classification errors.