@qwertycoder Practice isolations, extensions, and antispins in all four timings and directions. Please flow with the motion of the arms, I.e. twisting torso on top of pelvis and legs to allow the head to do a complete 180 degree twist. In all of these motions, it really helps to allow the torso to twist. . . that way there's no forcing. . . well, maybe a little :) be kind to your body!
Lorq thank you so much for the video! I've been working on these variations for maybe 3 weeks now. You opened my eyes to a bunch I had not yet even picked up!
wow dude I got some serious learning to do. been spinning poi forever now and have always wanted to dip into club spinning. now I have some serious inspiration. Thank you.
@barnzee1 Word. Thank you. There will be some more club tutorials here by the end of the month, i hope. That is my goal. Bringing folks from the awkward beginning phase to the fun and explorative intermediate level.
@barnzee1 Word. Thank you. There will be some more club tutorials here by the end of the month, i hope. That is my goal. Bringing folks from the awkward beginning phase to the fun and explorative intermediate level. Happy spinning!
@ma3lstr0m06 I'll be posting some simple tutorials akin to what I teach in a workshop this month. My goal is to break down spin, antispin, isolation, hybrids, PRACTICAL MOVES that help flow,
with a bonus of different windows to move around the body and an invention of mine, "flow throws". Stay tuned! And thanks for the encouragement. Peace out!
@ma3lstr0m06 Word. Some of them are much more awkward than others. I find that the antispin is the crucial part, as far as awkwardness. The isolations and extensions feel natural as part of the timing and directions of the hands-- either outstreched in extension or "tucked in" in isolation. The antispin antispin hybrids are some of the most awkward for me. Likewise the spin/spin are rather easy, as if you rock the timing and direction of the arms with one outstreched and one "tucked in".
@toastermatic These antispins are not cateyes. Cateyes are a type of antispin that traces a unit circle (the length of one poi/club) with the hand, while the poi/club spins the opposite direction of the hand, creating an elipse. Since the hands in these antispins trace a circle twice the clubs' length (2 unit circles), the result is a single line traveling up and down or left and right. There is a term for this in poi, though you don't see it much, given the difficulty. Tremel? Anyone know?
Nice... thank you, I'm learning and this video helped me a lot
dacho10 2 months ago
Thank you so much for posting these!! been trying to find club spinning tutorials for a while and these have helped me immensely :D
smileztheone 8 months ago
1440 Views! That's like, 10 times the number of 3d hybrids. . . whoa.
SirLorq 1 year ago
du er mærkelig
TheCowFighter 1 year ago
mixing up the possibilities is so fun. the seeds from which much awesomeness will spring!
mutantsong 1 year ago
damn dude that was quite sick, lots of possibilities here and great fun too. a shoulder killer though.
qwertycoder 1 year ago
@qwertycoder Practice isolations, extensions, and antispins in all four timings and directions. Please flow with the motion of the arms, I.e. twisting torso on top of pelvis and legs to allow the head to do a complete 180 degree twist. In all of these motions, it really helps to allow the torso to twist. . . that way there's no forcing. . . well, maybe a little :) be kind to your body!
SirLorq 1 year ago
Really slick moves. I enjoyed watching this.
AmagineD 1 year ago
Lorq thank you so much for the video! I've been working on these variations for maybe 3 weeks now. You opened my eyes to a bunch I had not yet even picked up!
JonahSpins 1 year ago
wow dude I got some serious learning to do. been spinning poi forever now and have always wanted to dip into club spinning. now I have some serious inspiration. Thank you.
barnzee1 1 year ago
@barnzee1 Word. Thank you. There will be some more club tutorials here by the end of the month, i hope. That is my goal. Bringing folks from the awkward beginning phase to the fun and explorative intermediate level.
SirLorq 1 year ago
@barnzee1 Word. Thank you. There will be some more club tutorials here by the end of the month, i hope. That is my goal. Bringing folks from the awkward beginning phase to the fun and explorative intermediate level. Happy spinning!
SirLorq 1 year ago
LORQ IS THE MASTER OF CLUB ILLUSION. ALL BOW TO HIS HYPNOTIC GYRATIONS!
nobane 1 year ago 2
@nobane WORD EM UP.
SirLorq 1 year ago
awesome compilation!!!!!
britree99 1 year ago
hell yea lorq... w00t w00t ..
jitpunkia 1 year ago
This is excellent, thorough, helpful, and fun. I will definitely be sharing this with people who ask me about club hybrids.
mtnmischief 1 year ago
Seconded the kudos from Edinburgh. Great stuff.
connect2contact 1 year ago
oh man i ve been looking for a "simple" video to show all these moves .
I'm whacking out my clubs as we speak .
If you feel like making more tutorials/super sweet videos about clubs don't hesitate :D
kudos from edinburgh
ma3lstr0m06 1 year ago
@ma3lstr0m06 I'll be posting some simple tutorials akin to what I teach in a workshop this month. My goal is to break down spin, antispin, isolation, hybrids, PRACTICAL MOVES that help flow,
with a bonus of different windows to move around the body and an invention of mine, "flow throws". Stay tuned! And thanks for the encouragement. Peace out!
SirLorq 1 year ago
@SirLorq do a workshop in europe ;) i'd attend it :D
i'd attend it twice :)
ive got 10 of the 24 down and fluid now, some of them are so hard !
ma3lstr0m06 1 year ago
@ma3lstr0m06 Would love to! I'll be at EJC 2011 in Munich, Germany. Could teach there. 10 of 24 is great!
SirLorq 1 year ago
@ma3lstr0m06 Word. Some of them are much more awkward than others. I find that the antispin is the crucial part, as far as awkwardness. The isolations and extensions feel natural as part of the timing and directions of the hands-- either outstreched in extension or "tucked in" in isolation. The antispin antispin hybrids are some of the most awkward for me. Likewise the spin/spin are rather easy, as if you rock the timing and direction of the arms with one outstreched and one "tucked in".
SirLorq 1 year ago
sweeeeeeettttt duddeeeeeee e!!!!! ;)
kennyjuggling 1 year ago
Yay! Nice looking hybrids.
bls337 1 year ago
Some dam tasty tech sir! Thank you for the dose of inspiration ~
chesstaipan 1 year ago
fucking love it!!!!! thanks buddy :) :) :)
Wiggletrix77 1 year ago
i love cateyes!!!!!!
toastermatic 1 year ago
@toastermatic These antispins are not cateyes. Cateyes are a type of antispin that traces a unit circle (the length of one poi/club) with the hand, while the poi/club spins the opposite direction of the hand, creating an elipse. Since the hands in these antispins trace a circle twice the clubs' length (2 unit circles), the result is a single line traveling up and down or left and right. There is a term for this in poi, though you don't see it much, given the difficulty. Tremel? Anyone know?
SirLorq 1 year ago
@SirLorq oh, i would like to know now too, cuz i do very similar things with poi
toastermatic 1 year ago
Very nice work :D
globalj420 1 year ago
<---brain hurts
casperov 1 year ago
awesome...now I can truly geek out...its like Im at the vulcan even now...
TheSoftPath 1 year ago
Perfect! Goal attained! Share it round the world!
SirLorq 1 year ago