Body Styling
Beginner Level
The foundation — what every new dancer needs to know
The personal movement vocabulary you add to fundamental technique — isolations, waves, arm work, and accents that express your individual identity as a dancer.
Beginner focus
Your first body styling goal: don't have dead arms. During open position moments, let your free arm have purpose — it doesn't need to do anything fancy, just have tone and placement rather than hanging limp. Your second goal: add subtle hip movement to your basic step. Not forced — just allow your natural hip motion to express itself. These two additions (arm awareness + hip movement) are the foundation of all body styling.
Tips
- •Film yourself at socials and watch your styling — you'll see habits (good and bad) you didn't know you had
- •Dedicate one social night per month to 'styling experiments' — try new things, see what sticks
- •Cross-training in other dance styles (hip-hop, contemporary, heels) directly expands your styling vocabulary
Common mistakes
- •Copying someone else's styling exactly instead of developing your own — use inspiration but create your expression
- •Styling that interferes with leading or following — your personal expression should never compromise partner connection
- •Over-styling — doing too much, all the time, everywhere. Styling should have dynamics: some moments busy, some moments clean
- •Ignoring the lower body — styling isn't just arm waves. Hip, torso, and leg styling are equally important
Practice drill
Put on a bachata song. Dance the basic step for the entire song, but each 8-count, add ONE new styling element: 8 counts with hip rolls, 8 counts with arm waves, 8 counts with chest pops, 8 counts with shoulder shimmies, 8 counts combining two elements. This drill inventories your styling vocabulary and identifies which elements need more practice. Record it. Watch it. What looked good? What needs work? That's your styling development roadmap. One song.