When I was learning to call I read about diagramming dances (I completely
forget where). For an equal turn dance you write the dancers as "l" and
"r" for the ones and "-" for the twos. The top of the hall is the top
of
the page. You mark these down at each step through the dance:
r l
- -
A1 (16) Neighbor balance and Swing
- -
r l
A2 (8) Ravens chain
- r
- l
A2 (8) Promenade across
l -
r -
etc.
I usually find I can keep things clear enough that I can track what a given
call will do to the dancers, and having all the stages written down is
helpful for looking back.
Jeff
On Sun, Feb 9, 2020 at 3:21 PM Alan J Rosenthal via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
I use chess pieces. It's not all that different
to what you are doing with
magnets except that I think it meets the objectives you state in your
message.
Partners are same pieces of a different colour (e.g. a pawn's partner is
a pawn, etc, and you only use one pair of pawns). You can use black to
represent Larks etc (or the other way around obviously). Couples are
arranged in some meaningful order to you, such as by the value of the
chess piece or by height.
Then after you move them all around for a while, you can still tell who's
who.
Actually I bought four different colours of chess pieces from
https://www.chesshouse.com (five years ago, so things there might have
changed). I've never used them to play chess. (I had in mind to make a
youtube video about how some dance progressions work, which I may or may
not manage to do some day. But I've used them to work out dances a lot.)
regards,
ajr, dancing in and near Toronto, Canada
_______________________________________________
Contra Callers mailing list -- contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
To unsubscribe send an email to contracallers-leave(a)lists.sharedweight.net