Carousel Dip
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
A rotating dip where the follower lowers while both partners spin — a moving snapshot that defies gravity and common sense.
Intermediate focus
Start with a static dip combined with a quarter turn. Leader: dip the follower and, while supporting her, rotate 90 degrees. That's a baby carousel dip. If both partners are stable at a quarter turn, try a half turn. Build the rotation incrementally — never jump from quarter to full rotation. The follower should feel equally supported at every point in the rotation. If she feels unstable at any angle, stop increasing rotation.
Tips
- •Leader: your legs are the engine. Deep knee bend, wide base, and turn from the hips. If your knees hurt, your technique needs work before the figure does.
- •Practice the rotation without the dip first. Can you turn with the follower leaning back 10 degrees? 20? Find your current limit and work from there.
- •The exit is harder than the entry. Practice the recovery phase more than the dip phase — a rough recovery ruins a beautiful rotation.
Common mistakes
- •Attempting a full rotation before mastering the quarter and half turns
- •Leader looking down at the follower instead of maintaining their own upright axis
- •Letting centrifugal force pull the follower outward — the leader must actively counterbalance
- •Rushing the rotation instead of maintaining a constant, controlled speed
- •Attempting this figure without warming up or with a partner you haven't trained with
Practice drill
Quarter-turn carousel dip, 5 reps clockwise, 5 reps counterclockwise. When consistently stable, progress to half-turn: same reps, same standard. Progress to three-quarter. Then full. This could take weeks of practice sessions — that's normal. The carousel dip is not learned in an afternoon.