#758090 - 28/07/06 02:53 AM
Re: Doubles Isolated Antispin
[Re: mcp]
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monkey
Registered: 11/10/02
Loc: London
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oh and an interesting point concerning the...
+ + + +
or
...X... X....X ...X ...patterns is that each of the wicks only traces half of the pattern, forming two interlocking swastika patterns (easy now... its just a shape... think of it as an angular multi armed spiral)
Of course, this is all dealing with even-sided antispin (cross box) rather than 3 or 5 pointed stars (or triangles and pentagons) which require two large circles before repeating. In these odd-sided patterns, each wick would trace the entire pattern before the pattern would loop.
_________________________
"Switching between different kinds of chuu chuu sometimes gives this "urgh wtf?" effect because it's giving people the phi phenomenon."
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#758091 - 28/07/06 03:10 AM
Re: Doubles Isolated Antispin
[Re: simian]
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Flying Water Muppet
Registered: 20/05/03
Loc: Edin-borrow.
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here's a picture I made earlier, it's for imakode, about anti-spin with quarter time isolations. http://www.homeofpoi.com/gallery/showpho...=500&page=1[  ] What am I replying to? Oh cross anti-spin, I mean standard anti-spin. One end only goes up and down, the vertical bit of the cross, the other only horizontal, while the arm holding the staff, not the other one, that would be weird, makes a big anti-spin circle. cole: it's not difficult. You spin a figure of eight in your right hand and then take a step to the right and you're still spinning the same figure of eight. like OO it doesn't have to change direction and cross your body, you just have to move. It's the same with the anti-spin version, except you have to do the think I describe somewhere above to get it to work. simian: people would only see the pattern if you could do it that well that fast. And I'm not going to spin fast just so I can do anti-spin. Though actually, that sounds like a good smackdown opportunity... maybe I will learn faster spinning... I may learn triangle anti-spin only because then I can do flux capacitor patterns.
_________________________
"the now legendary" - Kaskade "the still legendary" - Kaskade
I spunked in my friend's aquarium and the fish ate it. I love all fish. Especially the pink ones. They are my bitches. - Anon.
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#758092 - 28/07/06 03:53 AM
Re: Doubles Isolated Antispin
[Re: mcp]
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monkey
Registered: 11/10/02
Loc: London
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#758093 - 28/07/06 03:58 AM
Re: Doubles Isolated Antispin
[Re: simian]
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Flying Water Muppet
Registered: 20/05/03
Loc: Edin-borrow.
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can you re-explain from after the ARGH! please simian? This time as if you aren't talking to yourself, and instead a five year old kid.
_________________________
"the now legendary" - Kaskade "the still legendary" - Kaskade
I spunked in my friend's aquarium and the fish ate it. I love all fish. Especially the pink ones. They are my bitches. - Anon.
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#758095 - 28/07/06 04:08 AM
Re: Doubles Isolated Antispin
[Re: mcp]
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monkey
Registered: 11/10/02
Loc: London
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OK, i thought that wick iso's could only work with the curvy diamond shape.
But it turns out they fit in circles that haven't been turned inside out too.
(probably, still not 100% on this. Your diagram is a bit dodge, but i've been spinning a biro in front of my monitor and it seems to check out)
But to get the isolations... (here's where it gets above 5year old level a bit)
the rotation of the staff is emphasised differently along the curve of the circle.
IN BOTH PATTERNS
It's vertical at North and South
horizontal at West and East
diagonal at NW NE SE SW
HOWEVER
the phase of the staff at NNW, NWW, SWW, SSW, SSE, SEE etc etc etc
is different for the two patterns
meaning the speed is varying for staff rotation relative to arm rotation.
i think....
feels like it anyway. High possibility i'm wrong. Is there a trigonometrist in the house?
_________________________
"Switching between different kinds of chuu chuu sometimes gives this "urgh wtf?" effect because it's giving people the phi phenomenon."
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#758096 - 28/07/06 04:10 AM
Re: Doubles Isolated Antispin
[Re: coleman]
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monkey
Registered: 11/10/02
Loc: London
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Written by: coleman
and i say this antispin cross stuff looks waaaaaay better in motion than it ever will in a photo.
awww i luv you cole 
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#758100 - 28/07/06 05:18 AM
Re: Doubles Isolated Antispin
[Re: mcp]
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big and good
Registered: 29/08/02
Loc: lunn dunn, yoo kay
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Written by: you
You spin a figure of eight in your right hand and then take a step to the right and you're still spinning the same figure of eight. like OO it doesn't have to change direction and cross your body, you just have to move.
It's the same with the anti-spin version, except you have to do the think I describe somewhere above to get it to work.
i still think that this:
Written by: you
making a cross anti-spin travel over two crosses that don't cross your body (forwards and forwards, instead of forwards and reverse) is possible too, just with having to make an infinity sign around the points instead of doing them in the order that the monkey states. Might look alright if it was hella tight.
doesn't work for the reason i stated here:
Written by: me
tracing an infinity sign with your hand would mean mean that you travel round one half of the pattern clockwise and the other anticlockwise.
unless you reverse the direction of spin of the stick as you go from one side of the infinity pattern to the other, one half will be spin and the other antispin, no?
i stated yesterday:
Written by: me
translation of the double plus pattern to 'normal' (read 'hands move in circles only' or 'messy') antispin, would equate to [a hand pattern that is] something like two circles next to each other:
oo
to link them and maintain the antispin motion, you have to go over the top of the first circle, down to the join *staying on the top* over the top of the second circle then round and then across the bottoms.
"I start from the bottom left, up to the left vertical, then down to horizontal then up again? Or down to the the right bottom, which is probably what my anti-spin wants, rather than getting tricky with those two verticals in a row."
this seems to suggest that you think you link these two antispin circles/patterns by moving your hand in an infinity sign type motion.
cole. x
_________________________
"i see you at 'dis cafe.
i come to 'dis cafe quite a lot myself.
they do porridge."
- tim westwood
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#758101 - 28/07/06 03:36 PM
Re: Doubles Isolated Antispin
[Re: coleman]
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Tantamount to fatuity
Registered: 30/07/01
Loc: Down the road
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Ok I've read this thread 3 times all the way through, over the last few hours. And i can honestly say i understand it all far less than when i came in. I think the 3 of you - Cole, Meg and Simian - seem to be saying pretty much the same thing but all using differing (and deranged) terms. Aside from that i'm muchly baffled. [mutter] This is why i don't venture into the spinning forums any more. Way too geeky... I'm going back to hide in intros. It's safer, comfier, fluffier and far less prone to brain meltage...[/mutter] wake me up if you decide anything? 
_________________________
"I'll carry this....It's harder to spill a hat" - Chellybean "...like a rabbit caught in a lighthouse?" - Chellybean
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#758102 - 28/07/06 08:52 PM
Re: Doubles Isolated Antispin
[Re: Cantus]
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big and good
Registered: 29/08/02
Loc: lunn dunn, yoo kay
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i played with a stick last night
and even better than that, i worked out why there's a difference between an antispin cross isolation using a long arm circle and doing it using a bendy diamond:
to get the isolation to work in both dimensions (horizontal and vertical) using a long arm circle, it is necessary for your stick to be *exactly* twice the length of your arm (from shoulder to palm).
of course, you can get it to work if you turn your full arm circle into a cone (i.e. like tracing a circle out in front of you) to reduce the size of the circle, but it isn't a full arm circle then is it?
not to mention that getting the angle of your arm from your shoulder, speed of rotation of your arm and speed of rotation of the stick to coincide and produce an antispin cross, is a bit too much for me - i don't think i'd ever get it clean working on that method.
to me, the bendy diamond method feels easier to spin for two main reasons:
- it has arm direction change points at corresponding the wick direction change points so the wick motion doesn't feel so disconnected from what you're doing with your arm/hand (still looks mental though)
- you can very easily adjust the patterns to any size stick (up to and including a stick twice the length of your arm)
i can't do ++ as a fwd to rev antispin fig 8 yet but, i did work out that spinning ++ using longarm circles only is impossible without either a direction change of the arm or the stick on the horizontal join.
new outlook for friday:
maybe sticks are okay after all...
cole. x
_________________________
"i see you at 'dis cafe.
i come to 'dis cafe quite a lot myself.
they do porridge."
- tim westwood
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#758104 - 28/07/06 09:39 PM
Re: Doubles Isolated Antispin
[Re: mcp]
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Flying Water Muppet
Registered: 20/05/03
Loc: Edin-borrow.
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box anti-spin partly. the full thing:  what the hands do:  what the wicks do: 
_________________________
"the now legendary" - Kaskade "the still legendary" - Kaskade
I spunked in my friend's aquarium and the fish ate it. I love all fish. Especially the pink ones. They are my bitches. - Anon.
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#758105 - 28/07/06 09:44 PM
Re: Doubles Isolated Antispin
[Re: mcp]
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Flying Water Muppet
Registered: 20/05/03
Loc: Edin-borrow.
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anti-spin box expanded: what the hands do: what the wicks do: as you can see, nice bit of maltese cross action going on there.
_________________________
"the now legendary" - Kaskade "the still legendary" - Kaskade
I spunked in my friend's aquarium and the fish ate it. I love all fish. Especially the pink ones. They are my bitches. - Anon.
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#758106 - 28/07/06 09:51 PM
Re: Doubles Isolated Antispin
[Re: coleman]
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monkey
Registered: 11/10/02
Loc: London
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Yay mr cole! thats made the circle thing much clearer to me, and explained why i previously thought it impossible.
to all people complaining that we're not writing this in baby language:
well if you want to have things easily explained to you, then you should only learn about stuff that's completely understood already, innit?
it was only through reading Rev's posts on antispin with poi that i came to an understanding of it in the first place. Rev's posts were confusing and near unreadable, BUT they contained an enormous amount of useful information found nowhere else.
in other words: If you wanna read the good stuff, you have to learn how to read properly. So take what you can from our rambling and shut up your complaining
Written by: cole
i can't do ++ as a fwd to rev antispin fig 8 yet but, i did work out that spinning ++ using longarm circles only is impossible without either a direction change of the arm or the stick on the horizontal join.
i kinda said that when first mentioning the pattern, but i was being fairly cryptic at the time.
Yup, i think direction change of larger circle feels more natural, but meg reckons stick direction change feels nicer. Matter of opinion really.
EDIT: Whoops, wrong bit highlighted in red. no there isn't a direction change as such. The pattern is simply reset back (or forward) 180 degrees. Direction of large and small cricles remains unchanged. Possible with long arm. With bendy diamond method that is.
_________________________
"Switching between different kinds of chuu chuu sometimes gives this "urgh wtf?" effect because it's giving people the phi phenomenon."
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#758107 - 28/07/06 09:53 PM
Re: Doubles Isolated Antispin
[Re: simian]
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monkey
Registered: 11/10/02
Loc: London
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ooooh and pretty pics miss meghan
any chance of some super-anti (2:1) pics?
_________________________
"Switching between different kinds of chuu chuu sometimes gives this "urgh wtf?" effect because it's giving people the phi phenomenon."
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