


Want to learn how to incorporate rope into your professional sessions with ease and confidence?
This workshop covers everything from tying to furniture, incorporating rope with sex toys, and creating fun positions to combine with other BDSM elements. There is so much you can do with rope that it can feel intimidating at times, but with a few practical basics you can enhance your sessions easily with another tool and diverse type of play. We’ll also discuss essential safety considerations and how to adapt for a wide variety of clients. Sophia has been working in the adult industry since 2015 and Pro-Domming since 2018.
Event Details
Date & Time: January 23rd, 2025, 7 pm-10 pm CET (Berlin time)
Format: workshop (virtual)
Audience: LGBTQIA+ & FRIENDS
Language: English
Minimum Knowledge Level: Basic rope skills helpful but not required
What to Bring: Rope! And a space – we will discuss tying in dungeons vs. tying in hotels or bedrooms etc.
Solo or Partnered: all constellations welcome (everyone needs a ticket)
Class recording: Yes. The recording will be made available after the live class for 14 days.
What we will cover
– Tying to dungeon furniture and incorporating toys.
– Easy, efficient ties for combining rope with other types of play.
– Negotiating with clients and adapting to different bodies or needs.
– Key safety info for risk aware play
Accessibility Note
The workshop and discussion are held in spoken English with automated captions in English which are provided by Zoom. Communication within the class can be had via chat but also people can come on mic and speak. If you participate in this workshop and need more assistance, i.e. someone reading out the chat, etc, please message us at info@karada-house.de beforehand.
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, queer, intersex, asexual, aromantic, agender.
Friends describes 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 acknowledgement 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 pro-actively work and strive to be good friends and allies to marginalized people.
Facilitator


