1826-1850 of 2013
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travel meets juggling (5balls) - The Gift

pfuisi

PFuisi - travel meets juggling 6 of 40 countries - now @ - Windsor (Canada), - Seoul (South-Korea), - Graz (Austria), - Kauns (Austria/Tyrol), - Agva (Turkey), - Wuhu (China), - Dresden (Germany), - Warwick Castle (UK). Thanks to Liby Productions for the present ;) Music: MacGyver theme more @ www.pfuisi.net

01:39

3887

0

19-03-2011

[3]

travel meets juggling - china

pfuisi

PFuisi - travel meets juggling 1 of 42 countries - now @ - Shanghai - Beijing (great wall) - Hangzhou (zen temple) - hefei, anhui, changchun, wuhu, .../nMusic: 考试什么的都去死吧 by 徐良 & 庄雨洁 (Xu Liang & Zhuang Yujie) more @ www.pfuisi.net

03:39

2826

0

06-11-2013

[0]

Treino da Meia Noite 1 / Midnight Training 1

Mr.Thithos

Sim, minha camera é um lixo, mas dá pra pegar a ideia. Em breve, o resultado final desse treino./nYes, my camera sucks, but you can get the ideia. Soon, the final result of this training./nMusica/Music: Tosca Tango Orquestra - El Cholulo

02:50

2125

0

30-05-2012

[0]

Tři otočky

00:04

1962

0

13-09-2011

[0]

Triathlon Juggling Training

JugglingJoe

Juggling while swimming, biking, running. Preparing for a triathlon on April 21, 2012. To donate to my fundraising charity (Ronald McDonald House Charities) and learn more about the triathlon, please visit: http://www.firstgiving.com/fundraiser/joesalter

02:57

2796

0

10-02-2012

[2]

Triathlon Juggling World Record

JugglingJoe

Juggling while completing a triathlon. (1/4 mile swim, 16.2 mile bike, 4 mile run) April 21, 2012 Joe Salter Hope you enjoy the video. Also, please spare me the "unicycle" suggestion comments or "you should have done a 3 ball cascade" while riding no-handed comments. If you don't know anything about triathlons, then those comments are very naive, because you have no idea what a race like this entails. I spent 10 months training, researching, and fine tuning what works. Until you actually get out there and see what "works" then try to understand that what looks good on paper, doesn't always translate into good practice. Enjoy! -Joe

02:53

8380

3

03-05-2012

[6]

Triciclo Circo

marcelopsicirco

Rutina de contact y multiball, del espectaculo triciclo circo.

05:04

2905

0

17-12-2010

[0]

Trick With Hats - Vanishing Foot

TricksWithHats

This is surprisingly effective when done well, it can really look like your leg has dissapeared! Unfortunately it's very angle sensetive, it only really works when viewed from the front. Incase you can't work it out from the video, here's how you do it. Hold the hat by the brim, with the opening resting against the top of your thigh, move it down until it covers your foot and hides it from view. As you raise the hat again, bend your leg at the knee. Et voila! Your leg has vanished! Lower the hat again, straightening your leg as you do so. Ooh look! Your leg has re-appeared! Top tips: Only raise the hat as far as your knee, and keep your foot hidden behind your thigh. A few minutes practice infront of a mirror and you'll soon get the hang of it. Bonus points: Make both legs dissapear, at the same time...

00:07

1657

0

15-03-2015

[1]

Tricka Technology

04:55

12090

8

28-09-2009

[17]

Tricks I'm working on

Josh_Turner

Just some things I've been working on recently, hope you enjoy :) I realize sponsored is spelled wrong in the video, not sure how I managed that!!

02:46

5843

5

28-03-2012

[12]

Tricks with a Horizonal Throw

01:44

1865

1

05-05-2018

[2]

Tricks With Hats: Arm Roll

TricksWithHats

Arm Roll - Rolling a hat along your arm. Hold the hat in an inside grip, and from behind the head (duck a bit), release with a flick of the wrist. The brim stays in front of the arm, whilst the crown rolls along it. The easy catch is palm-upwards. The hard, snazzy catch, which extends the roll a little bit, is palm downwards; let the brim roll over the thumb, and pinch-catch the brim between thumb & forefinger. Smile. From the TricksWithHats archive

00:06

1869

0

04-12-2015

[0]

Tricks With Hats: Dan's Rolls

TricksWithHats

Hold the hat in an inside grip. Put the other arm out at an angle and twist the hand round so it faces backwards. Place the hat on the upper arm and let it roll down to a catch in another inside grip. Repeat as often as you like by alternating sides.

00:04

1697

0

04-12-2015

[0]

Tricks With Hats: Dynamic Arm Tumble

TricksWithHats

Hold the hat by the brim in an outside grip with the crown facing forwards. Swing your arm up infront of you, until your hand is about eye level, with the hat tilting slightly upwards. If you let go at the top of the swing, the hat's momentum should carry it through, and it will roll down your arm. The movement that follows is similar to the one arm tumble. Look down your arm, tuck your chin in, and raise your arm slightly so that the hat rolls downhill and on to your head. Once you can do that, try throwing the hat from your left hand, and using the right hand to guide it into a dynamic arm tumble.

00:03

1676

0

04-12-2015

[0]

Tricks With Hats: Easy Arm Tumbles

TricksWithHats

Turn your head to the left, then reach over with the right hand to grab the front of the brim (in as close to an inside grip as you can manage). Lift the front of the hat and remove it from the head so it is upside down above the shoulder. Straighten the arm so it ends in an inside grip at arms length. Turn your head to the right so you are looking at the hat, flex the wrist so the hat lies inside the forearm then bend the elbow and replace the hat on the head (with your hand at the back). Repeat on the other side.

00:06

1467

0

04-12-2015

[0]

Tricks With Hats: Forward Roll

TricksWithHats

This one is quite easy, assuming you can already do a forward roll from a standing position. So, learn to do a forward roll from a standing position (get a gymnast to teach you :-) then put a hat on the floor in front of you, with the opening facing skywards and give it a go!

00:02

1772

0

04-12-2015

[0]

Tricks With Hats: Headstop Cascade

TricksWithHats

Headstop Cascade - A three hat juggling pattern where each hat is thrown to the head. This is a series of Throw To Heads, alternating hands, but immediately after you make the throw, you have to take off the hat on your head with the throwing hand.

00:00

1519

0

04-12-2015

[0]

Tricks With Hats: Steve Rawlings Twisty Hat Catch

TricksWithHats

Steve Rawlings showed me this trick in Birmingham and said that he used to do it in every show, but now that he's older (and a little rounder :-) he can't get it every time any more. Steve uses a china plate for this trick, but it works with hats too which is why it's here! :-) Take the hat in your right hand, using an inside grip and hold it so that the crown of the hat is facing to the left. Throw the hat virtically with some spin, and then do the following while the hat is in the air... Put your right hand between your legs Take the hand around the back of the right leg Stand on your left leg and move the right hand & foot behind the left leg Then, catch the descending hat in your right hand, from that position. Without falling over. Top Tips: Practice the "tangle yourself up" bit first without the catch. Keep your eye on the hat as it decends, practice loads... Luke Burrage managed to get this on video within 30 minutes. I've been trying for weeks and can't do it. It's pretty hard.

00:06

2403

0

15-03-2015

[0]

Tricks With Hats: Wipe Up Arm Roll

TricksWithHats

This is a combination of parts of two other tricks, so it would probably help to learn them first. They are the Arm Roll and the Wipe Up Start with the hat on your head. With the right arm, do the first part of a wipe up, just to the point where the hat comes off your head. However, instead of carrying it out to the side, push the hat back on your head so that the bottom of the brim comes into contact with your shoulder blades. Use your upper arm to push the hat off and to the left, so that it can roll down your arm as though you were doing an Arm Roll, catching it in you hand as you do so One variation that Mike is fond of, is to grip the front part of the crown with the crook of the elbow. Mike claims this gives him more options, and more control over where the hat goes. Try it, it may work for you too!

00:03

1989

0

15-03-2015

[0]

tricksticks.co.uk

00:28

1977

0

18-11-2013

[0]

TricksWithHats: Plates - Twistover

TricksWithHats

Start with plate flat on your right hand. Swing it in a full anti-clockwise circle, twisting your wrist over at the top so the plate finishes back in its original position with your shoulder and wrist twisted to support it. Reverse the move to unkink your arm. It's also possible to stop the plate at the top of the circle and bring it back down the way it came. From the TricksWithHats archive

00:03

1558

0

09-03-2015

[0]

trident manipulation - Chinese male duo

bad1dobby

2 male Chinese acrobats performing with tridents. I do not know which troupe they are from. This skill is sometimes called Fei-cha. It is a traditional Chinese acrobatic form. The tridents have loose elements at the head, which creates the characteristic jangling noise. From a video titled Chinese Acrobatic Feats.

05:10

2222

0

04-09-2015

[0]

trident manipulation - Chinese solo female

bad1dobby

Solo female Chinese acrobat performing with tridents. I do not know which troupe she is from. This skill is sometimes called Fei-cha. It is a traditional Chinese acrobatic form. The tridents have loose elements at the head, which creates the characteristic jangling noise. From a video titled Beijing Magic Shows.

03:38

2424

0

04-09-2015

[0]

trident manipulation - Chinese teenage duo

bad1dobby

Teenage boy & girl from Chinese acrobatic troupe performing with tridents - a traditional Chinese acrobatic form. From the Chinese National troupe. The trident heads have loose elements which make the characteristic jangling noise. (This skill is also known as fei-cha)

04:27

2748

3

04-09-2015

[0]

trident manipulation - Cirque de Demain 1980

bad1dobby

This form of staff juggling now seems to be commonly called "fei-cha". It comes from the traditional Chinese acrobatic repertoire, and in chinese acrobatics books and videos that I have seen it is translated as "trident manipulation". The trident has loose elements at the head, which make the jangling sound - it's often a very noisy act. This spinner is Mohamed Badr El Nouby from the Cairo Circus School.

01:33

3249

0

02-09-2015

[2]

 
 
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