Try flat ground (for speed) and slight inclines (for added resistance).
Not exact matches
If you've mastered an exercise on
flat ground,
try throwing in an unstable surface and see how well you respond.
As your arms reach the
ground,
try to position your forearms
flat on the mat and grasp the wheel with both hands to hold it in place.
After a ton of research (i.e. reading the internet), I ordered pairs to
try from Vionic, Pluggz, and Earthies, and ended up keeping Pluggz EOS ballet
flats (even though I'm not sure I buy into their whole «
grounding» theory»), and 2 pair of Vionics (a loafer and a sandal).
The environments are (literally, in the sense of the
ground) rather
flat, textures are hardly consistent and the «chaotic» angle the book
tries to portray just ends up looking confused.
Instead of wrestlers just lying
flat on the
ground selling like death, wrestlers will now be in visible pain throughout the match and will do new things such as rolling towards the bottom rope to
try to help themselves up.
When we first started, my inclination was to
try to figure out how to make
flat planes, and then we ended up doing this last print with a series of eight to ten aquatint planes, all gray tonalities on top of the hard -
ground etching.