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Fixed Friday: Learn These

December 21, 2013 By Drew Tetz

Hello, Fixed Axle Faithful! As you may know, this is the last Friday of 2013. What you might know is that this is also the last installment of regular Fixed Friday content—it sounds dramatic, but I highly doubt you’ve seen the last of us, we’ll just be stepping back from one a week. As Ed noted, it’s been fun, and we’re quite proud of our work; after fifty episodes I hope that we’ve given fixed axle acolytes some material to chew on and maybe taught somebody a trick or two. Thank you all for stickin’ with us through this crazy year and for supporting us in whatever comes next.

As this is the last installment of the year, I thought it might be fitting to do a roundup of my favorite concepts. Consider this the Cliffs Notes version of the Fixed Axle master class, and please by all means check out our back catalog… but more than anything learn these tricks!

Before we start talking about individual tricks, I would urge every new Fixed Axle player to check out Ed’s “Back to Basics” clip & article, which addresses most of the questions about equipment, string tension (important!), and all that good stuff.

LEVEL 1

Job #1 is developing good control over the yo-yo. You’ll be spending a lot of time winding your yo-yo back up, so you might as well learn a couple fun ways to do it! I personally favor the thumb start (demonstrated by André here), a quick pushing down on the yo-yo with your fingers to start it spinning again, but it wouldn’t hurt to learn a couple of different regen techniques. Another favorite is Engineer’s Windup, wherein you set the dead yo-yo on the string and roll it along the trapeze to build friction and start the string winding—while many people write this move off as cheesy beginner stuff, I find looping out of it quite satisfying, and Kyle Nations actually built it into a trick with his “Necro” concepts.

Though I don’t feature it in the video, I would be remiss not to mention the almighty snap start. Ed has a great primer on those.

The next trick, Sidewinder, is an absolute essential, because it is hands-down the fastest way to fix string tension on a responsive yo-yo. You can read my full article on it here for a more in-depth look, but definitely learn it! Lefty loosey, righty tighty, keep that string in shape.

Pocketwatch, created by the brilliant Nate Sutter, is perhaps the simplest new trick in years, and that’s what makes it brilliant. Read Ed’s writeup on it and don’t forget to shake your hips for maximum points.

Trapeze Stall & Trapeze-Bro Stall are not only the building blocks of modern stall play, but also the first tricks featured on Fixed Friday. Neat, right? Complete the circle by reading that original article, trapeze stall was a total gamechanger for me and I consider it a modern essential. Once again, Ed’s knowledge is indispensable, and his “How to Stall” video is perfect for fixing your technique, and his Bro-Stall Repeaters video can show you some more advanced variations. The Double-or-nothing (2or0) stall was not covered in depth in a FF article, but once you feel comfortable with your trapezes you should try going all the way around and practicing your rollouts.

Zipper Stalls is perhaps my favorite stall-based repeater, perfect in its symmetry & simplicity. Ed made it, so naturally he’d be the best to learn from (probably in this article he wrote featuring it) but I love seeing the way players’ individual style affects the aesthetics of this trick. Being able to roll smoothly from one stall to another and learning the way the yo-yo flips depending on spin direction is an essential skill that this trick develops in you pretty quick.

Thumb Mount stalls are another fixed axle standby, the perfect fusion of response-powered tricks and string trick precision. The Lunar Landing, addressed a little bit later, is probably the most famous example, and Ed discusses a number of them in his Lunars clip, but you can also see a few good examples in his one-handed clip. The entrances in the video are some of my favorite, but I’ll admit some are harder than others: forward pass to reverse lunar is definitely the one I would try to learn first.

LEVEL 2

Dumptrucks, alright! I’m proud because it’s an original trick, and one of my favorite modern fixie concepts. I addressed it at length in this video, but the main takeaway is that you can flip the yo-yo halfway on the z-axis to dismount and regenerate, something that is stylish, fun, and useful for finding transitions. I may be biased, but I do consider it a staple of the modern fixed axle canon, so give it a try at least.

Behind the back braintwister is not a move in everybody’s quiver, but it serves as a good way to practice stalls in body tricks… and beat fools in butterfly horse.

2or0 chopsticks stall is one of my favorite stall mounts, because of how technically rich it is for being accessible straight off of a throw. I enjoy just mounting and rolling out as in the video, but you can see it applied to a more complex trick in my Crisis video.

I’ve chosen Makin’ Da Zines to be representative of all planet hop based repeaters, which you can learn more of in my Planet Rock column. Makin’ Da Zines is a favorite because it’s a stylish & satisfying exit from trapeze stall, something you’ll end up in a lot. There’s definitely something to be said for tricks that just feel “right.”

Shoot the Moon is an all-time classic hall of fame trick, and well worth learning even if you don’t usually like looping. Ed’s Lunars clip addresses them briefly, but it’s the sort of trick that you really have to just work at for yourself. My tips: use something light & butterfly-shaped, make sure your string length & response are comfortable, be careful that the yo-yo doesn’t flip between repetitions, and use a much gentler touch than you ordinarily would.

Stop & Go is a classic 1A move covered in many other places, but Ed does such nice things with them on fixed axles that I thought it was worth mentioning. Definitely plenty of unexplored territory there, and a great trick to show non-yoyoers, too. The following clip with the uncredited clip is also a tribute to Ed, specifically his daring “flinch” trick.

LEVEL 3

Bouncehouse is a subtle & fun transition move introduced in my “Huh? Wha?” clip, and when combined with Charles’ 2or0 entrance it has become one of my bread & butter fixed axle combos. LFO is another blending of elements that make a satisfying whole: you can see it in slomo in that sidewinder article, the blending of dumptrucks, sidewinders, and 3D catches feels great.

Kickflips, Heelflips, Shuvits, and the Mach-5 Whip Flip can all be found (along with other flips) in my Flip Tricks column. I think it’s fair to call the kickflip my “signature move” by now, which is exciting, ’cause I’m like not even a superhero or a wrestler so I’m not supposed to have those… but anyways, they’re high risk stall-specific moves that look great and feel fun, so you should at least try to learn one of them. Probably Kickflips, they’re the easiest, but shuvits are satisfying exactly because of how difficult they are.

UFO Recaptures are perhaps the simplest way to get into Horizontal tricks for fixed axle. Read more about them here. It’ll take practice to catch the returning stall on the string, but it feels great being able to switch between planes on a whim. The Double Regen is silly but fun.

Mystics are very technical, z-axis transitions between strings in the middle of a stall. Though the intricacies are often missed by non-fixed players, they do feel really awesome and open up a whole new way of looking at stall string formations. Check the full Mystical clip here.

…and, because it’s nice to go out with something fun, I ended with Venetian Blinds, a trick you should definitely not show your mother-in-law or the police.

Thank you all for tuning in all year, and I hope that we’ll be able to trade Fixie tricks on a contest floor sometime soon. I’ve had a ton of fun and have so much love for Ed, Steve, & André for helping making it happen. Don’t forget to join the Fixed Friday facebook group and the Fixed Axle Megathread on Yoyoexpert to shun bearings with the other cool kids. Music in this video is a freely downloadable remix I made of a song by Duns Broccoli. (P.S. Bonus shoutout & thanks to Louis DiGiuseppe for helping me shoot this, look for another exciting fixie video from us soon…)

Yo-yos used were the Duncan Butterfly, the Duncan Wheel, and the Moon by 44RPM.

BONUS CLIP: I forgot to put these in the video so now they’re instagram exclusives. Whatever. Broadway stall and kwijibo kickflip suicide.

Filed Under: Fixed Friday, Players, Trick Theory, Video Tagged With: drew tetz, duncan butterfly, fixed axle, fixed friday

Fixed Friday: UFO Recaptures

November 22, 2013 By Drew Tetz

Cast aside your bearings, ye fixed axle faithful, and join us as we take a step into horizontal responsive tricks. This may sound like a daunting challenge, as neither horizontal nor responsive play are particularly easy, but we can use stalls to make response work to our advantage with a maneuver called the UFO Recapture.

When a yo-yo is spinning, it’s going to tend to stay spinning in the orientation you threw it thanks to centripetal force. Stalls are neat, though, because they give us the opportunity to swing or rotate a yo-yo however we want, which lets us change directions mid-sequence.

The UFO Recapture is all about throwing the yo-yo out horizontally to a UFO (aka Sleeping Beauty or Flying Saucer) and then capturing it back in a sidestyle stall mount. In its purest form, this is accomplished with a horizontal throw, popping the UFO’ing yo-yo up so that it starts to respond, and then intercepting the yo-yo with the string so that it falls into a stall. The most difficult part of the trick is getting your string lined up and your timing right, remember to take it slow and hook your finger around the string.

Before you try this, you’re probably going to want to be pretty comfortable with the basics of sideways yo-yoing so you can get a good solid throw, but there aren’t many string hits to be seen, so no worries if you don’t quite have your sideways braintwister combo on lock yet. (hey, I still don’t have one!) The biggest difference between frontstyle & a sidestyle spin for recaptures is that a frontstyle power throw has the yo-yo coming back towards the front of the string and the sidestyle breakaway has it coming behind the string. I personally consider frontstyle easier to learn, but try both.

Oh, also, at 23 seconds in: if you do a horizontal broadway it helps you set up a double-or-nothing, which you can then recapture, but that’s probably a little more on the advanced end of things.

28 seconds in marks my personal favorite way to practice the recapture, which pairs it with a dumptruck-style half-swing from a trapeze stall into a UFO. This technique is one of the easiest ways to get into a horizontal trick with a fixie, because you already have control of the string once you restart, and I’ve used it in a number of tricks (one of which can be seen at the end of Mystical.) When you pair it up with the recapture, it can effectively become a repeater, which means you always know a way into and out of horizontal spin from trapeze stall—score! Adam Brewster did some neat things with this as well.

Immediately after the half-dumptruck/recapture is a silly little trick called “knockbacks” you can learn to mix it up, wherein you just bounce the yo-yo off your palm to reset the regen, tough love style… and after that is an even sillier trick, proving that you can catch it in a thumb mount and broadway out. Or not broadway out! But really, who doesn’t want more spin moves?

At 1:05, we take a break from the UFOs to explore a mount we haven’t talked about much on FF: the fake triangle stall. Pulling the string through the loop on a trapeze stall creates a fake triangle suitable for really big suicide loops, something that I used to my advantage with this weird semi-horizontal offplane monster, based heavily on Paul Yath’s 360 suicide. Ideally it would be even more horizontal, but it sure is nice not having to keep the momentum afterwards. After that, we have another suicide trick that shows you more ways to use horizontal tricks to create pauses: this shifts the plane by intercepting a kickflip suicide halfway through, tossing a whip loop over it, and then continuing into a mach-5 mount.

Finally, we close out the video with a cross-armed 1.5 stall pushed out around the arm into a UFO and recaptured in a double or nothing stall. Going around your arm and keeping the string structure clean isn’t easy with a responsive yo-yo, but the feeling is totally awesome, so I recommend at least giving the entrance a shot.

Thanks for tuning in, and see you next Friday for more bearingless brouhaha. As always, the yo-yos used were Duncan Butterflies & Wheels, and you can download the beat for free from my Soundcloud.

Filed Under: Fixed Friday, Trick Theory, Video Tagged With: drew tetz, duncan butterfly, fixed friday, responsive, ufo

Fixed Friday: DIY or Die

October 25, 2013 By Drew Tetz

Hey fixomaniacs! We got a special treat for you this week, as we set the tricks on the backburner and make our own fixed axle yo-yos at home.

A huge chunk of the current Fixed Axle renaissance can be credited to the woodworking geniuses keeping the idea of pure & simple yo-yoing alive: TMBR led the charge, of course, but Hildy Bros, and Once Upon a Tree are all doing amazing things. When you throw their spinning works of art, it’s hard not to catch the bug and dream of making your own fixie. Unfortunately, not all of us have access to a lathe, but necessity is the mother of invention, and one unconventional (but extremely fun) way around this problem is silicone molding. Sonny Patrick of Anti-Yo fame was the first person that I know to do this with yo-yos, he made some super cool bootleg Freehand Zeros in 2006.

Now, before we get going, I’m going to throw out some spoilers: I’m making a bootleg Butterfly. As dear as the Butterfly is to my heart, I can look at it objectively and recognize that it’s not as high-class a performer as a Barracuda. To complicate matters further, these butterflies are going to be poured from wax, and let’s just say that there’s a reason there aren’t any crayon yo-yos on the market. Honestly, though, if you’re throwing fixed axle you’re probably already familiar with the fun of working within constraints, and a little extra “surface noise” on a trick shouldn’t bother you too much; to be perfectly frank, I kind of like a yo-yo that doesn’t listen to a thing I tell it.

There are a ton of way better tutorials on how to make molds on the internet, so I don’t want to get too caught up in specifics, but here’s the basic process:

  1. Prepare the yo-yo for molding; for the butterfly, this involved wrapping a piece of Sculpey clay around the axle post and then smooshing the cap into it to make the yo-yo airtight. Put it in a small airtight box. (I took the opportunity to make an extra spiky art yo-yo, and I highly recommend taking the chance to make your yo-yo unique… but it’s also worth noting that the normal Butterfly worked better.)
  2. Mix together the silicone compounds. I used Oomoo 30 from Inventables. Pour it all over the yo-yo.
  3. After waiting for the mold to cure, pop the yo-yo out and clean up any nasty bits of unnecessary silicone or chocolate chips stuck in the mold or whatever.
  4. Melt some wax. I recommend following the instructions on that link and being very very safe, but will confess to melting wax in a soda bottle sitting in a bowl of boiling water from time to time. You’ll get better results by going to Goodwill and buying a cheap pot, though.
  5. Pour the wax into the mold! This is very exciting, but try to do it slow and avoid bubbles.
  6. Wait 20-30 minutes for the wax to cool entirely, pop it out, do it again, and bam! You got some yo-yo halves. I used a Duncan Butterfly axle, but found that it worked much much better if I put a little bit of hot glue on the axle before sliding it into the halves.

And that’s it! You got yourself a yo-yo you made all by yourself. You should probably be noticing by now that wax does not really play like any other yo-yo material; if you used crayons like we did, your string should change colors within four or five throws, and get noticeably stiffer as well. After 20 throws, it may be tough to make it sleep, let alone do a braintwister.

And that’s GREAT! It may not be the same feeling as designing a perfectly smooth machined bearing contest monster, but there’s definitely going to be some smiles the first time you hit a Kickflip on it. If the novelty wears off, you might enjoy casting one out of resin; Death Ray Kendama has made some really awesome resin stuff, if you want some inspiration.

I threw some funky bonus tricks with the yo-yo at the end so you can see it in action. Not gonna do as much tutorial writing this week, but just to highlight three new things:

  • At 1:00, we got a weird chopsticks flipback carrying on from where the trick at the end of “Imperialism” left off. The inital dump truck transition is the main conceptual meat of the trick, but the end is also noteworthy for relying on the return of the yo-yo to switch the orientation of the string.
  • At 1:33, we have a follow-up to that Mach-5 Kickflip Suicide that people seemed to like in the Flip Tricks vid. I’ve found that it’s actually a little bit easier to whip it than to take the rotating slack loop approach, so give it a shot! It’s also worth noting that an unexpected bonus(?) of wax yo-yos is that it makes the string super stiff, which either makes flip suicides a dream or a nightmare.
  • I wanted to close out the clip with a recent horizontal favorite. This is probably one of the simplest fixed axle ‘zontals I’ve found, but it’s still pretty flashy & fun, so give it a shot! From a trapeze stall (ideally caught with a very small loop), use your thumb to tilt the yo-yo up on its side before throwing it out into a UFO. With a little practice, you can intercept it on the return and catch it in a trapeze stall. Bam!

Alright, suckers, that’s all for this week! Now, go try it at home.

Filed Under: Fixed Friday, Trick Theory, Video Tagged With: bootleg, diy, drew tetz, duncan butterfly, fixed friday, homemade, silicone molding

Fixed Friday with Kyle Nations: The Lepidopterist

August 9, 2013 By Drew Tetz

Butterfly superstar Kyle Nations has graciously volunteered to fill in this Fixed Friday with a detailed post-mortem of his recent video extravaganza The Lepidopterist. Drink in the knowledge, kiddos! –drew

–––

While Ed and Drew are off at the Fixed Axle Championship of All the World (and something else called the World Yoyo contest; maybe you’ve heard of it), I offered to fill in so that the column can keep on trucking. Get ready to get weird as I dissect my latest video for your reading pleasure and my shameless self promotion:

First thing’s first, you gotta be aware of your string tension. For my setup and the tricks I like to do, neutral tension is the way to go and a sidewinder is always a slick way to get there. Easy peasy, lemon squeezy, mac and cheesy. Let’s get on with it, shall we?

The first couple tricks, Web Cartridge Reload and Steve Brown Crisis respectfully, are pretty straightforward variations on one­handed stalls. If you’re comfortable with the standard thumb n’ forefinger stall, the next logical step is to adapt that stall for a different pair of fingers. Actually pulling it off is another matter entirely. You have much more control over your thumb when it comes to the subtle “cushioning” motion that makes the stall work; substitute the thumb for your pinky, and you’ve got a recipe for bruised knuckles. But all you have to do is train your fingers to open wide while the yoyo is on approach and then close ‘em up once it’s passed your 2 fingers to hit the string. If you do it with your palm up, get yourself some red tights ‘cause you’re Spiderman! Hit it with your palm down and suddenly you’re millennial Steve Brown! I do it 2or0 Crisis Flip style because it’s better to rock on with 2 hands.

Nessie vs Champ vs Ogopogo is sort of a one­of­everything buffet as combos go, combining moves seen in Sting Like a Butterfly and some fresh nuggets. It begins with a reworked Anne vs Lizzie, which is a move that I think looks both simple and difficult and actually is both simple and difficult. What’s happening is I’m interrupting the yoyo with my throwhand as it’s responding. This creates a loop of slack which I catch with my freehand. You can get used to the hold by draping the string over your freehand, calling back the yoyo, and catching with your throwhand. But it looks and feels more awesome to do it in one fluid move. And being more awesome impresses more girls. Anyway, next I just swoosh that bit of slack around to my thumb while at the same time turning my throwhand to achieve the correct spin direction on release for a trapeze stall. With the loop on my thumb, I make a hinge­like motion to get into that plain vanilla trap’ stall. The reason I don’t go into a more complex hold here is because I was set on doing a kickflip suicide, and those are hard, man! And this particular kickflip transitions to a cross­armed manbro stall because things can always be more difficult. But think of all the girls you can impress with moves like that!

Moving on, things get way easier after that kickflip. I simply uncross my arms before regenerating and stalling back on the other side of the same string segment. From here I perform a really odd move that’s hard to see in the video, so I’ll do my best to explain. I grip the stalled yo with my forefinger, pinky, and thumb so that I can fwoosh around the slack held by my freehand to end up in a braintwister stall. Now I twist that braintwister through the z­axis, regen, and perform a gorilla­style trap’ stall in preparation for an easy­mode dumptruck, followed by one half of Salvador Dali Windshield Wipers interrupted by a thumb stall. I dump that stall over my freehand for a little wrap flowing right into one of my favorite moves, the

Slap Wrap. Garnish with a somersault and an elbow bump and there you have one monster of a combination plate.

I hope that wasn’t too much jargon for you to handle, but don’t worry because it’s all smooth sailing from here, especially since we’ve arrived at Son of Thriller! Believe it or not, there’s actually more to this trick than awkward gyrations. Throw a forward pass, but catch it without turning your hand over. Then throw it back out, but be careful because now that the yoyo is flipped over, it’ll want to turn sideways and blow raspberries at you. Keep up the rhythm and you’ve got the trick. The throw and catch by itself looks a bit too much like a nazi salute, hence the Thriller pose. A Wayne’s World “we’re not worthy” pose is also acceptable.

The next couple tricks are my answer to Ed’s snap start tricks, but instead of snap starts, they’re based on rolling starts. What’s unique about rolling starts is you can start a dead yoyo without touching it which opens up intriguing possibilities. The first, Cosby Resurrection, is an interesting case because it begins wound and is promptly killed before being brought back to life. “I brought you into this world, and i’ll take you out,” and then back into it. The meat of the trick is just a double­on hook that you unravel and roll start out. I like it because you could throw it into a combo without breaking your rhythm. The second roll start trick is called Necrophilia because you’re playing with a dead yoyo. Mostly, anyway, because I do give it a tiny bit of spin so I can perform the laceration without the yoyo going wibbly wobbly. It will be much easier to practice that laceration with a long spinning yoyo if you wanted to try this trick out. The really difficult bit, however, is the dump onto the back string. We’re getting really close to kendama territory here, so use your knees. Also, any trick looks good if you punctuate it with a Rump Bump.

The last trick is my favorite of the video because it looks good, feels good, and I can hit it more consistently than I think I should be able to. It’s called Pete Townshend’s Magic Triangle. Oddly enough, the windmill jam at the beginning was not initially the Pete Townshend part. After the bowling toss, which has a Son of Thriller­esque trickiness, I perform a move I call a Pete Townshend. You can see the full version of that trick 54 seconds in to Sting Like a Butterfly. Your throwhand revolves around in the same direction, and it always felt like a mini version of Pete’s windmill to me. So after that I do a stylish straight­string redirect to achieve the spin direction needed for a split bottom stall. From there, I found that if I dismount/regen over my throwhand, suddenly I have a loop of slack to throw around. So I whip that bad boy around to my freefinger and simultaneously stall on the back string. In this hold, I discovered that I can pull the front loop through the back and bingo bango: false triangle! But this false triangle has a mutation that makes a stalled yo want to untwist. I let it, but carefully because if it spins too far, it’ll have too much momentum in the wrong direction. It needs to twist and stop. The next move is similar to a kickflip suicide, but it’s really more of a pop shuvit if we’re going to stick to the skateboard vernacular. Now comes the magic because I don’t re­catch it in the same loop, but rather the tiny opening down by the yoyo. By hitting that spot, the triangle dissolves into a trapeze quite magically. If you’re trying it for yourself, you can also stick your freethumb into that little opening to reach a similar end if you can’t hit the pop shuvit, although this method is not nearly as magical. But either way, you must end the trick with wiggling “magic fingers”. It’s not right without it.

And there you have it! The Lepidopterist scrupulously analyzed in hopes that it gives you an idea of what’s going on between my hands, a string, and that hunk of plastic at the end. And hopefully I’ve given some of you a couple ideas to toy around with and make your own. Ed and/or Drew will be back next week I’m sure with plenty of tales to tell from Worlds. Thanks for reading all you a­fix­ionados out there!

Filed Under: Fixed Friday, Players, Trick Theory, Video Tagged With: duncan butterfly, fixed axle, fixed friday, kyle nations, the lepidopterist

Fixed Friday: Fixed Axle Championship of All the World Warmup

July 26, 2013 By Drew Tetz

Happy Fixed… almost Saturday! Okay, yes, I’m running extremely late on this one, but hopefully Kyle warmed you guys up and we can keep the Fixie train rollin’.

This week is special because it’s my last Fixed Friday column before the World Yo-yo Contest! While Fixed Axle doesn’t have a dedicated division like 1A-5A, the Fixed Axle Throwdown is a time-honored tradition, and last year’s onstage antics brought it to new heights (as you may remember from David Ung’s documentation of it.) While the show is traditionally semi-invitational in order to fill the correct number of slots, we’re accepting applications, so if you want a shot at being a wildcard comment below and find me or Ed at Worlds to let us know you’ve got what it takes… to be Fixed Axle Champion of All the World!!!

Please pardon the extra exclamation points, it’s just so exciting.

This year, as in years past, we’re going to have a peer-judged, criteria-based best trick contest. What does this mean? We randomly choose a theme, the competitors perform a trick based on the theme, and then use their shoes to vote for their favorites. We’ve got a good solid lineup of star players and some fun surprises for the day of the contest, but why spoil those? Let’s get back to the column.

There’s no real unifying theme on the tricks this week, but I brought out a couple of bangers & combos to get myself pumped up for Worlds. Combo #1 is performed on one of those crazy 70mm wood yo-yos Chuck & Jensen have been using. It’s not my place to hype, so I can’t tell you if or when these will be available, but Jensen’s impeccable flow was definitely a big inspiration in these sequence. If you want a challenging trick for the weekend, give the broadway 2or0 a shot: throw a breakaway, rotate your body towards your throwhand (clockwise for righties) and try to catch the yo-yo in a double-or-nothing. Tough stuff, especially if you aren’t into hitting your face! Not to brag or nothin’, but the one in the video is actually a broadway 2or0 stall that I regenerated into… hit it in front of me at Worlds and I’ll give you a Butterfly or somethin’.

Next on the chopping block, another string/stall fusion sequence, showing how you can exit a complicated mount straight into a stall and mix it up with your normal tricks. This particular example is more a combo of some of my recent favorite moves than a super original trick, but I encourage people to try and find similar links.

Next up, we got a reimagining of one of the most classic string tricks of all time, the Kwijibo. My favorite thing about Kwijibo is that it’s such a recognizable, classic format that people can really play with it and get some interesting “tributes” to it. For example, Elephark & yours truly each came up with a distinct E-fan Kwijibo. This variation throws kickflip suicides into the mix, which isn’t too tough on the first transfer but deceptively tricky for the second throw. I’m proud of it.

For an intermission, a brief glimpse at one of the perils of plastic yo-yos. We love ’em. I’ve really been putting this orange butterfly through its paces this week, but was still a little surprised when it popped open on camera.

…but let’s get back to the real tricks. The next trick, the Fingerflip. This is a bit of a retcon on the original “kickflip” trick, combined with the tough love setup for slacks & whips. Basically, throw the yo-yo, catch it with your non-throwhand, throw a flip (carefully!) and remember to use your knees when you catch it back on the string. A subtle, but very rewarding move.

Continuing in the vein of the broadway 2or0 stall is another weird instamount, the Burly or Nothing stall. So called because it’s so burly, I very highly recommend practicing this trick in a mirror with an unresponsive yo-yo before going for the full blind catch. Once you feel comfortable (or at least not terrified) with that, try switching to a responsive yo-yo and catching it in a stall. It’s fun! As long as you don’t hit yourself in the face, I mean, but isn’t that true of everythign?

Now, I’d like to slow it down and return to the trick that was giving me technical difficulties earlier, the Straitjacket stall. Straitjacket is a trick pioneered by Brazilian visionary Sid Seed that involves eating your vegetables in the morning and having a lot of skin, and has caught on in a major way with some of the lankier young players — most notably, Isaac Sams. I think Isaac’s actually hit the straitjacket stall on camera before, so I made sure to add some original flavor with a behind the back catch to ninja spin. You’re welcome. (Also, for anybody attempting to learn this trick, I strongly recommend using some long string and a Butterfly. Trust me. You’re gonna bang your knuckles quite a few times, you’ll want something light.)

Final trick of the video is a weird & goofy trick with a lot of body language, but I like it. Heavy inspiration from Anthony, Chuck, and Kyle Nations. For those of you who are interested in trick theory, the binding concept for this trick’s construction was trying to cross/recross/uncross my arms at every step while remaining at one or two levels of string. It’s a lot slower than some other combos, but has a neat back & forth pumping effect, too.

While Fixed Friday is almost over, hopefully these tricks will carry you through the weekend. Don’t forget to sign up for the contest if you want a chance to shine, practice hard on your spin moves, and go have fun! Also, I know this week’s beat is kind of crazy, but if you wanna download it you can totally do that right here.

Filed Under: Fixed Friday, Players, Trick Theory, Video Tagged With: 5a may, drew tetz, duncan butterfly, fixed friday

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