
25 (Saturday) 11:00 - 26 (Sunday) 18:00
English
Join us to take your very first steps in learning Japanese-inspired rope bondage within a closed group setting. This weekend intensive course is designed for absolute beginners with no prior knowledge
Join us to take your very first steps in learning Japanese-inspired rope bondage within a closed group setting.
This weekend intensive course is designed for absolute beginners with no prior knowledge whatsoever and gives more structure and time to learn than our drop-in classes.
René de Sans will be your guide and teacher and will encourage you to develop your skills, ground yourself in the fundamentals of tying and being tied, build muscle memory, and find inspiration on your rope journey.
Event Details
Date & Time: Saturday & Sunday, February 25th & 26th 2023, 11 am – 6 pm (1-hour lunch break in between)
Format: workshop
Audience: LGBTQIA+ & FRIENDS
Language: English
Minimum Knowledge Level: none
What to Bring: 1-3 ropes, towel, or blanket (we can provide workshop ropes if you have none)
Solo or Partnered: solo or partnered (each participant must purchase a ticket)
Price: 100 Euros per person for the entire weekend
What we will teach you
The content of this workshop will most likely include (but is not limited to!):
– rope handling
– single & double column tie
– wrapping, tensioning & counter tension
– basic frictions
– health and risk awareness in rope
– Tying and thinking creatively
– One rope exercises for connection and flow
– Breath, space, intention
Mandatory Covid-19 rules
All visitors and participants must wear an FFP2 mask at all times.
Who is this event for?
LGBTQIA+ describes the full spectrum of non-mainstream sexual orientation and/or gender identity, meaning: lesbian, gay, bisexual, pansexual, transgender, non-binary, genderqueer/fluid,
Friends describe people of any and all kinds of gender and sexual identities who are aware and respectful of the necessity, needs, and boundaries of a queer safe(r) space and its marginalized community.
When you consider yourself a friend you show acknowledgment to and are respectful of everyone’s self-expression and do not assume presume or project non-consensual ideas onto others. You actively request and use people’s chosen pronouns. You remain mindful of the fact that Karada House is first and foremost a space for queer people that you are also invited to attend. You have a genuine concern for the well-being of LGBTQIA+ people and remain in awareness of heterosexual and gender-straight privileges.
Friends don’t have to be perfect. None of us are. We request that we all proactively work and strive to be good friends and allies to marginalized people.
Tickets are not available for sale any more for this event!