Beginner

Open Hold

Beginner Level

The foundation — what every new dancer needs to know

A partner position connected only through the hands, creating space for turns, shines, and independent movement.

Beginner focus

Stand facing your partner at arm's length. Connect one hand (leader's left to follower's right) at roughly waist-to-chest height. Your grip should be a relaxed hook — fingers curled around your partner's hand, but not squeezing. Now do your basic step while maintaining that connection. The hand should not bounce, pull, or push during the basic — it should float at a consistent height and distance.

Tips

  • The key to open-hold turns: keep your leading hand at a consistent height and trace small circles. Your partner will orbit around that point naturally.
  • When in doubt, connect with just one hand. Two-handed open hold is harder to manage and offers less freedom for both partners.
  • Practice your open-hold tension by holding a rubber band between your hands and your partner's. It should stay taut but never snap — that's the right amount of connection.

Common mistakes

  • The 'arm crank' — yanking your partner's arm to initiate a turn instead of using a smooth, circular guide.
  • Limp hands — without frame tone in your arms, leads evaporate before they reach your partner.
  • Pulling your partner toward you instead of guiding them around you — open-hold turns are circular, not linear.
  • Holding too tight — your partner needs to be able to spin their hand inside your grip during turns.

Practice drill

Face your partner in single-hand open hold. Leader: do nothing but basic steps and gentle circular hand guides for an entire song. No turns, no patterns — just explore how your hand movement translates through the connection to your partner's movement. Follower: respond only to what you feel in the hand. This builds the sensitivity you need for complex open-hold patterns.

Related terms