stacking

Drex's Tech Poi Blog #278: Right angle point isolation stacking

Last light I was playing with right-angle stalls and found a nifty way to switch which was the active side of the pattern with a point isolation held at 90 degrees. As Natan pointed out after recording, this also possesses some stacking properties.

No votes yet

Drex's Tech Poi Blog #223: More right-angle moves

While I was in Boulder, Alien Jon and I spent an evening playing around with some movements based around creating right angles with inspin stalls and pendulums. Here are a couple variants we played with and a couple transitions one can use to get in and out of them.

No votes yet

Drex's Tech Poi Blog #190: Noel's stall/stack combo

At Burning Man, Noel showed me this nifty combo that included elements of a number of different tricks that have showed up on this blog in the past few months and filled in a couple of the gaps between them in some very creative ways. This combo involves doing a pair of inspin vs antispin stalls that one then transforms into a hybrid before using the resulting alignment to create a horizontal stack. Tricky, but fun!

No votes yet

Drex's Tech Poi Blog #173: Odds and Ends 3

Included in this odds and ends collection: a few variants on horizontal pendulum stall stacking and by popular demand some of the Arashi tech I've had on the blog lately rendered with glow so you can see the trails of the poi as they go along. Finally, a nifty hybrid e6 and I worked on this weekend--taking Arashi tech and hybridizing it with trochoid spinning. The result is ultra bizarre, but I think looks really cool.

No votes yet

Drex's Tech Poi Blog #171: More hybrid families

Here's another hybrid family based upon a particular poi orientation--this one being hands together and poi apart. Triquetra vs pendulum, Mel's horizontal stack, point isolation walking, and stall chasers all make use of this alignment. Like the other hybrid families I've demonstrated on this video blog, it's a great tool for transitions.

No votes yet

Video Tech Blog #161: tunnel stacking

Guest-starring Noel Yee from the Vulcan Crew! We spent the weekend in rural Georgia at the inaugural FLAME Festival, tinkering around with stacking and tunneling between workshops. Here, the two of us demonstrate one of the patterns we came up with that involves each person turning with either an inspin or an antispin flower, alternating with pendulums to create a really kickin' interference pattern. Sorry in advance for the audio--we really were trying to project but it was damned windy out!

Your rating: None Average: 5 (1 vote)

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.

Your rating: None Average: 4.5 (2 votes)

Video Tech Blog #141: horizontal stacking patterns based on Leo's breakdown

Just an experiment...editing my video instead of doing it as a single take. Please leave feedback and let me know what y'all think of doing it this way. Anys, today on the Poi Theory Group on Facebook, there was a fascinating discussion over horizontal stacking patterns and Leo (leospoi) lent us some of his expertise. He's been thinking of abbreviating the elements of these tricks with single letters to as a mnemonic device to make different combinations. With that in mind, here are three homogeneous patterns, three hybrids, and one possible CAP based upon this breakdown.

Your rating: None Average: 5 (2 votes)

Video Tech Blog #119: Poi head tracing leash patterns

At Wildfire, Charlie and Baz came up with an interesting pattern that switches between right angles similar to some stacking patterns Ronan demonstrated earlier this year. I noticed that one side-effect of the pattern was that it forced the poi head to follow the length of the leash when switching positions, and started looking for other patterns that exhibited this same characteristic. Here is the first one that I've found.

No votes yet

Video Tech Blog #96: triquetra vs pendulum hand switching

This puts together a few threads that came out of Firedrums and Wildfire. It's basically just a couple different approaches to switching which hand is performing pendulum and which is performing triquetra in a hybrid. We can use either 1.5 stacking or a lockout to get us there--or both if we so choose!

Your rating: None Average: 1.3 (15 votes)