Beginning Single Passes: Difference between revisions

From Juggling Patterns Wiki - Your resource for new juggling patterns
Content deleted Content added
Karsten (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Karsten (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
 
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Other languages: [[Beginning Single Passes/DE_Erste Singlepässe werfen|Deutsch]] [[Image:German_flag.svg|30px]]

This is page is supposed to help you learning passing with with regular single passes - ideally with the help of someone more experienced to help you along.

''' Single passes''' are passes in which the club does a single turn until arriving at the partner. They are often just called '''passes'''.
''' Single passes''' are passes in which the club does a single turn until arriving at the partner. They are often just called '''passes'''.
<!-- [[Passes are probably easier than selfs]] for several reasons. -->


''Teaching'' people passing clubs:
''Teaching'' people passing clubs:
For the pattern labeled as "assymetric", one of passer is supposed to be far more advanced than the other, who needs no previous experience.
For the pattern labeled as "assymetric", one of passer is supposed to be far more advanced than the other, who needs no previous experience.


[[image:throwing-a-pass.png|thumb|upright=0.5]]
[[image:throwing-a-pass.svg|thumb|upright=0.5]]
It is not necessary to be able to juggle 3 clubs alone (for the "beginner" side of the patterns when assymetric)
It is not necessary to be able to juggle 3 clubs alone (for the "beginner" side of the patterns when assymetric)



Latest revision as of 08:52, 14 March 2026

Other languages: Deutsch

This is page is supposed to help you learning passing with with regular single passes - ideally with the help of someone more experienced to help you along.

Single passes are passes in which the club does a single turn until arriving at the partner. They are often just called passes.

Teaching people passing clubs: For the pattern labeled as "assymetric", one of passer is supposed to be far more advanced than the other, who needs no previous experience.

It is not necessary to be able to juggle 3 clubs alone (for the "beginner" side of the patterns when assymetric)

Next steps: