loving these breakdowns and explanations. however i can't watch past 8:11. its buffered past there but when we reach 8:11 it just freezes. am i missing anything too important?
I don't think that direction is irrelevant... when you teach yourself to spin in both directions it gives you the ability to change the direction you are spinning within the same pattern(crossers, mind-meltdowns, even with more advance stuff like triquetras) with a simple 180ª turn of your body. I've discovered that when spinning with music this ability is quite useful, because it gives you more ways to move around or interact with the music.
Super techie. I like it when poi is viewed critically like this, I think it adds a new dimension to the art rater than just letting it go. It adds some what of a discipline to its infinite form of moves. I'm going to put this on our face book group page to help out newbies for the first time.
I've always viewed timing as something that the POI heads are in... For example, couldn't your hands be in SAME timing, and yet your POI are in SPLIT timing? This might seem to break some of the rules that you explain in this video.
Either way, you have changed some of the ways that I'm looking at and approaching POI. I plan to watch all of your videos, and I want to thank you very much for contributing your thoughts and knowledge on the subject! Very much appreciated!
The reason I stay away from quartertime and hybrid-timings is simply that it gets into things that I haven't covered in this video... namely mode. The same principles still apply, but when you start playing around with (for example) a buzzsaw fountain (arms same time same direction, poi split time same direction) you get into compound modes where one poi is diamond (crossmode) and one is box (quartermode) Poiboi has some examples.
haha the black poi just makes it look like youre spinning a shadow.
GROVERDUB 7 months ago
loving these breakdowns and explanations. however i can't watch past 8:11. its buffered past there but when we reach 8:11 it just freezes. am i missing anything too important?
jasperkt 11 months ago
I don't think that direction is irrelevant... when you teach yourself to spin in both directions it gives you the ability to change the direction you are spinning within the same pattern(crossers, mind-meltdowns, even with more advance stuff like triquetras) with a simple 180ª turn of your body. I've discovered that when spinning with music this ability is quite useful, because it gives you more ways to move around or interact with the music.
P.S. I'm in love with your 9 square theory!
elditto420 1 year ago
stop spinning and talking at the same time dude... cmon...
TonyC911 2 years ago
Super techie. I like it when poi is viewed critically like this, I think it adds a new dimension to the art rater than just letting it go. It adds some what of a discipline to its infinite form of moves. I'm going to put this on our face book group page to help out newbies for the first time.
JaxFlow 2 years ago
I've always viewed timing as something that the POI heads are in... For example, couldn't your hands be in SAME timing, and yet your POI are in SPLIT timing? This might seem to break some of the rules that you explain in this video.
Either way, you have changed some of the ways that I'm looking at and approaching POI. I plan to watch all of your videos, and I want to thank you very much for contributing your thoughts and knowledge on the subject! Very much appreciated!
tempMentive 2 years ago
Thanks for your comments tempMentive...
To answer your question:
The reason I stay away from quartertime and hybrid-timings is simply that it gets into things that I haven't covered in this video... namely mode. The same principles still apply, but when you start playing around with (for example) a buzzsaw fountain (arms same time same direction, poi split time same direction) you get into compound modes where one poi is diamond (crossmode) and one is box (quartermode) Poiboi has some examples.
charlicopter 2 years ago