Close Hold
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
A close partner position where torsos are near or touching, enabling body-to-body communication for sensual movement.
Intermediate focus
Gradually close the gap until your chests can lightly touch. The leader begins transmitting basic information through the torso: a slight chest-forward to signal a body wave, a torso rotation to initiate a turn. The follower practices receiving these signals without anticipating. The key at this stage is distinguishing between signals and noise — not every body movement is a lead.
Tips
- •Practice close hold with a friend you trust. Comfort in this position requires trust, and trust requires practice.
- •Leader: think of your right hand as a flat, calm surface — never gripping, never pressing. It's a listening device.
- •If you're uncomfortable in close hold, communicate that to your partner. Consent is non-negotiable in social dancing.
Common mistakes
- •Squeezing or gripping with the arms — close hold is about contact, not compression. Your partner should be able to breathe freely.
- •Leaning weight on your partner — each dancer must maintain their own balance. Close hold is shared contact, not shared weight.
- •Placing the leader's hand too low on the follower's back — this is uncomfortable and ineffective for leading. Between the shoulder blades is the sweet spot.
- •Going to close hold too early in a social dance — build trust in open hold first, then gradually close the distance.
Practice drill
With a partner, start in open hold and do 16 counts of basic step. Then gradually close the distance over the next 16 counts until you're in close hold. Dance 16 counts in close hold. Then gradually open back up over 16 counts. Repeat. This teaches you to transition smoothly and shows you how communication changes at each distance.