Book/Printed Material A skating primer;
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Image 1 of A skating primer;
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 3 of A skating primer;
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 4 of A skating primer;
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 5 of A skating primer; SKATING PRIMER THE ESSENTIALS OF ARTISTIC (POPULARLY KNOWN AS **FANCY SKATING FOR USE ON THE ICE BY YOUNG BEGINNERS AND ALSO BY OLDER AMERICAN SKATERS INTERESTED IN THE NEW SKATING ^u 44k...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 6 of A skating primer; For outstrethed p. 4, read outstretched for R.I.B. p. 45, read R. I. F. for backwards p 65, read forward edge Dutch slide here means only deep-bent knee Read page 4, first....
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 7 of A skating primer;
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 8 of A skating primer; The Young Hungarian Skater, Fraulein Opika von Meray-Horvath, of Budapest, who, after diligent practice for several seasons since this picture was taken, according to the system advocated in this Primer, has again...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 9 of A skating primer; S RATING PRIMER THE ESSENTIALS Of ARTISTIC (POPULARLY KNOWN AS fancy SKATING FOR USE ON THE ICE BY YOUNG BEGINNERS AND ALSO BY OLDER AMERICAN SKATERS INTERESTED IN THE NEW SKATING George...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 10 of A skating primer; COPYRIGHT, 191 2, BY I George H. Browne, A.M. (V^ ^A^ Th^ Browne y Nichols School V Cambridge^ Massachusetts y U. S. A. For other skating literature by the same author, see...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 11 of A skating primer; Out of my lean and low ability I ll lend you some- thing. Shakespeare, Twelfth Nighty 3, 4, 378. A SKATING PRIMER PART I.— GENERAL OBSERVATIONS 2— Tag. E en so, thou...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 12 of A skating primer; York, that tn ing to learn it has begun to seem to would-be skaters of all ages much more worth their while than ever before; and the art itself has been so...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 13 of A skating primer; 5 The Spread Eagle, most easily learned in youth Father takes delight To see his active child do deeds of youth, Sonnet 37. Strain his young nerves and put himself in posture....
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 14 of A skating primer; The time to begin is when you are young and have plenty of time and energy (Cf. Fig. 5). If your begin- nings are right, you will be surprised to find what...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 15 of A skating primer; But before the ice comes, I wish to talk over one or two general matters with you: first, your tools; and then, the best way of using them. The tools to him...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 16 of A skating primer; durable to hand down than boots. If, then, a special boot can not be afforded, a plate inserted in the heel of the school boot, if it fits tightly enough, will provide...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 17 of A skating primer; blade long enough to project three-fourths of an inch behind the heel, as you look perpendicularly down by the back of the boot. It is absolutely essential for easy and effective work...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 18 of A skating primer; two points. Therefore, the skate best adapted to this kind of skating is ground almost if not quite fiat. But expert hockey plaj-ers are beginning to rock their skates at the heel...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 19 of A skating primer; The glass of fashion and the mould of form, The observed of all observers. Hamlet, 3, 1, 1 61. 7 The International Style. See Handbook, p. 162. Courtesy of Winter Sports Review....
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 20 of A skating primer; Fig. 8 (cf. Hdhh. Fig. 162), your sprawling and posing will be as bad as English stiff- ness. True but the a Iternative is n t sprawling or pos- ing. Twenty years...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 21 of A skating primer; if you would only do some of the stretching first, while standing on the flat of your foot, you would find it much easier and quicker to do the stretching and the...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 22 of A skating primer; I— Free-foot behind II— Free-foot in front FORWARD TWIST— Practice movements off the ice your muscles for all the movements necessary for all the prescribed figures. These two movements are (stand- ing...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 23 of A skating primer; Ill ^Free-foot in front IV Free-foot behind BACKWARD TWIST Practice movements off the ice limit of endurance short of strain. Do not force the muscles a little at a time is better...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 24 of A skating primer; IVi Going Backward IV2 Coming Forward BACKWARD TWIST— Arms stretched for balance if prosperity may be said to depend upon any one element. The temporary assumption of this apparently strained position is...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 25 of A skating primer; 18 Normal rob Start, p. 29 19— rob Spiral Practice movements III, IV, in action on the ice. 20— Both feet on the ice 21 The Spread-eagle Before straightening the legs. Legs...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 26 of A skating primer; thus, when you get to Position II, intensifj- the rota- tion to the limit by dropping the balance-foot still farther round (swing 1) lift it a trifle with the turn (Movement V)...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 27 of A skating primer; indicated; but they are seldom sudden, and never jerky. 2. Poise and movement of head The head should be held erect poised on the spinal column prolonged in a straight but not...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 28 of A skating primer; therefore, pointing toward the ice. Never carry the toe of the bal- ance-foot up in the air. 7. Lagging of bal- ance-foot The bal- ance-foot at the begin- ning of every curve...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 29 of A skating primer; 23 Right Inside Forward. Werner Rittberger As if that whatsoever god who leads him Were slyly crept into his human powers And gave him graceful posture. Coriolanus, 2, i, 235. In general...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 30 of A skating primer; A11 difficulties are but easy when they are known. Measure for Measure, 4, 2, 221. PART II.— THE ELEMENTARY FIGURES AND HOW TO SKATE THEM I ll draw the form and model....
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 31 of A skating primer; mentum, glide into a long spiral curve on one foot. Practise holding this spiral, outside and inside (Fig. 23), forward and backward (Figs. 7, 19, 47,) just as long as you can,...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 32 of A skating primer; 1.— OUTSIDE FORWARD EIGHT (1) Practice movements I, II, p. 16 Study carefully for imitation the positions in all the illustrations. Learn the rules {pp. 20-22) by heart. In skating this, and...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 33 of A skating primer; circle, to the starting-point, Fig. 29. The curves of the two halves of the eight must intersect at the beginning but it is reckoned a better print now-a-days if the circles at...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 34 of A skating primer; 36 Cross Roll Forward shoulders. The faultless execu- tion of the curves depends upon the condition that body, shoulders, arms, hips, and head be in motion during the whole circle. Sal- chow,...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 35 of A skating primer; At the end of the curve, the shoulders are almost flat with the print, left shoulder behind; the left foot is put down toes out so as to secure a strong inside...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 36 of A skating primer; 38— ROB— Pamn c^- well bent, Figs. 18, 61. Immediately jr x screw the shoulders and hips almost into the plane of the skating-foot. This backward pull of the left arm and...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 37 of A skating primer; IS difficult with the free foot in front, and the circle consequently has to be begun with the shoulders all wound up to start with. Furthermore, it is hard to see where...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 38 of A skating primer; THE SERPENTINE (Change of Edge) The serpentine is a combination of two curves by means of a change of edge. It is all one swing there is no pause or break in...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 39 of A skating primer; FORWARD CHANGES First Half, 5a (1) Right forward outside to inside. As you approach the end of the R. O. F. half-circle, draw right shoulder back (at A); the skating-foot consequently bites...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912
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Image 40 of A skating primer; 47— ROiB, before Change 48 roib, after Change balance-foot behind (Fig. 47); at the long axis, the skating-foot catches up on the flat, passes by, and bites into a sharp inside edge...
- Contributor: Browne, George Henry
- Date: 1912