I don't think these are antibrids. Can you send a reference of where you saw this to be classified as antibrids? Antidulums are not a new name, I've learnt this from Ronan McLoughlin who is my main reference for trick names since he actually invented so many of them.
Antibrid as far as I know, is any hybrid where one poi head meets one hand. Antidulums would then be a subclass of antibrid specifically involving pendulums. Nothing wrong with it, it's just kind of excessive imo. Love the content though, thanks for sharing!🙏✌️
@@mystik_wyzard hm, I think that antibrid also specifically refers to moves that involve some antispin (ok, this is basically antispin pendulum, but it's not really a shape). Also, this isn't a hybrid move in my opinion. As both hands do the same thing. Some people actually call this circular isolated pendulum (which in my opinion is less fun to say than antidulum) but never heard any association with antibrids. I wish to actually be more knowledgeable about the naming. Since I'm not a native English speaker, it's sometimes quite difficult to understand why some things are called the way they are. And also, I think there is some bias too. Some names in my opinion don't make much sense (such as CAP - continuous antispin pattern) or are based on particular understanding of a move (such as visual vs. circle-based - 1.5 weaves, for instance)
@@vojtastolbenko you are right! I was mixed up. Antibrid is a hybrid specifically involving antispin patterns.. and your hands are both doing the same thing so this would not technically be a hybrid. CAP is actually Continuous Assembly Pattern, not antispin, so it holds a very large amount under it's name.. not as a specific trick but and pattern that continously strings together, typically using petals/flowers. I suppose Antidulums could be it's own class, but the opposite would be, what.. Inspindulum? Or just Pendulums.. Time to delve🤣
@@vojtastolbenko this is why I love tech for the language, dissecting each individual part to their base components and then creating compositions. Keep on the research man,love your work🙏✌️
Just discovered your channel and tutorials and seriously thank you! Best poi tutorials ive come across 🙏
my pleasure! And it's only a fraction of what is there on my Patreon! patreon.com/vojtapoi - there is over a 100 of tutorials like this :)
Super grateful for the guidance Vojta 🙏
This looks like fun, thanks for sharing it!
I tlooks like the effect that I like in one way people do 1.5s, which happens to be the way I struggle with, so this is extremely useful.
Thanks Vojta
They are classified as Antibrids. Can we give it a new name? Sure. Not necessary though
I don't think these are antibrids. Can you send a reference of where you saw this to be classified as antibrids?
Antidulums are not a new name, I've learnt this from Ronan McLoughlin who is my main reference for trick names since he actually invented so many of them.
Antibrid as far as I know, is any hybrid where one poi head meets one hand. Antidulums would then be a subclass of antibrid specifically involving pendulums. Nothing wrong with it, it's just kind of excessive imo. Love the content though, thanks for sharing!🙏✌️
@@mystik_wyzard hm, I think that antibrid also specifically refers to moves that involve some antispin (ok, this is basically antispin pendulum, but it's not really a shape). Also, this isn't a hybrid move in my opinion. As both hands do the same thing.
Some people actually call this circular isolated pendulum (which in my opinion is less fun to say than antidulum) but never heard any association with antibrids.
I wish to actually be more knowledgeable about the naming. Since I'm not a native English speaker, it's sometimes quite difficult to understand why some things are called the way they are. And also, I think there is some bias too. Some names in my opinion don't make much sense (such as CAP - continuous antispin pattern) or are based on particular understanding of a move (such as visual vs. circle-based - 1.5 weaves, for instance)
@@vojtastolbenko you are right! I was mixed up. Antibrid is a hybrid specifically involving antispin patterns.. and your hands are both doing the same thing so this would not technically be a hybrid. CAP is actually Continuous Assembly Pattern, not antispin, so it holds a very large amount under it's name.. not as a specific trick but and pattern that continously strings together, typically using petals/flowers. I suppose Antidulums could be it's own class, but the opposite would be, what.. Inspindulum? Or just Pendulums.. Time to delve🤣
@@vojtastolbenko this is why I love tech for the language, dissecting each individual part to their base components and then creating compositions. Keep on the research man,love your work🙏✌️