cateye

Drex's Tech Poi Blog #201: merging Ronan and G transitions

I forgot to bring my tripod to the studio, so the vid on finding hybrid families using QFT will have to wait for the next video. In the meantime, here's a nifty transition that takes elements from patterns that Ronan and G play with and merges them together in a fun and creative way. It utilizes CAP vs pendulum and lets you switch which hand is performing which move.

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Video Tech Blog #183: the hybrid family challenge

This is a little bit of an experiment in interactivity with this vlog. I've played a lot in recent videos with the concept of a hybrid family--a move that will interlock with other moves at a specific or multiple positions. I've take this idea to the point where I can take some of my favorite moves and at each of the 4 compass points be able to transition to a completely different type of move. In this vid I demo triquetra vs pendulum and use it to switch to a point isolation, a windmill, a horizontal stack, and a unit circle hybrid.

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Video Tech Blog #175: Arashi tech pt3: cateye planebending

Part 3 of my Arashi wrap-up series from Firedrums. In this video we talk about creating longer and larger versions of the patterns from the first two videos by using cateyes instead of static spin circles to keep the patterns from overlapping with one's body.

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Drex's Tech Poi Blog #166: horizontal cateye antibrid stacking

Beginning the process of downloading all the tech from the past three weeks. This is a trick that Asaf (Poiboi) came up with that we used for a lot of our tunneling both at Kinetic and at Firedrums. The idea is to take horizontal cateye vs isolation and utilize some horizontal stacking to switch to the same move on the other side of the body. The spacing works due to that quirk of antispin flowers wherein they put the poi a unit circle distance apart 1/6th of the way around the handpath.

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Video Tech Blog #156: Composite flower hybrids

A couple cool ideas based upon triquetra vs pendulum, which kind of fudges the triquetra pattern to create something more akin to two different flowers cut and pasted together. Here I take the same idea and apply it to triquetras and 6-petal antispin flowers to create a new composite and hybridize it both with another triquetra and triquetra's inspin equivalent: 1-petal inspin. Note to self: when recording a video on St. Patrick's Day, do the video before the drinking begins--otherwise I talk a record sped up to double speed :-P

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Video Tech Blog #155: Timing and direction consistent hybrids

Last week Charlie posted a video to the Facebook Tech Poi Group of an 8-step CAP based in a 2-petal inspin vs 4-petal antispin hybrid. Having encountered this hybrid before when learning same time same direction hybrids from Yuta at last year's Firedrums, I realized that for any hybrid where you combine an inspin and antispin flower that have the same number of downbeats, they will maintain a constant timing and direction all the way around the pattern. Here are three examples in both same time same direction and split time same direction.

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Video Tech Blog #154: Odds and Ends Combos

Here is a grab-bag of combos inspired by Noel's recent vid on horizontal stacking flow and Poiboi's latest opus to his own form of poi wizardry. Some of these even integrate elements of both styles, but by and large I just had a lot of combo ideas and no idea how to present them. Thankfully it also gave me a perfect opportunity to use a track my friend Conway (Mr. Jennings) dropped on New Year's Eve and has been tickling my ears ever since.

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Video Tech Blog #152: Horizontal cateye antibrid float thingie

I started playing with this trick earlier in the week...it incorporates elements of the quarter-time floats/stalls that Poiboi and Mel have been using, but drops in and out of a horizontal cateye vs isolation antibrid at each end. I've been sticking pendulum vs CAPs in the same spot and figured I would just skip the middle figure. I like that it has an interesting start-stop dynamic to it.

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Video Tech Blog #150: horizontal cateye intensive

Last week I uploaded a tutorial on horizontal cateyes performed in split opposites and got some feedback that the cateyes were looking a little too much like floats, so I've spent a big part of the past week working on cleaning them up both by doing some older tricks I'm a big fan of and trying some newer ones. I used horizontal cateye vs isolation hybrids to check my hand spacing, horizontal cateye vs extension to check my hands' timing and direction, and a pair of triquetras arranged in a Star of David configuration to get a rough idea of what they should look like.

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Video Tech Blog #149: Horizontal cateyes in split-time opposites

I got a request on my recent video on the horizontal cateye vs CAP hybrid to describe how I was doing a pair of horizontal cateyes that I was using to switch side to side on the aforementioned hybrid. Here they are demoed--essentially they're a pair of cateyes performed in split time opposites and can easily be thought of as being a pair of floats in which then hands and poi heads switch orientation as they go back and forth. It's a little tricky because the planes the cateyes operate in are at a slight angle to each other.

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