If you must, but seventh year of ballet is better imo.
you can tell when a pointe shoe is dead is when the tip starts to rip, and the bottom starts to turn really black!!
Well it's a really big thing and you have to do ballet for a long time to be ready to gon onto pointe
really any kind of pointe shoe is good just make sure u get fitted
Because it is a french word, it is spelt differently but but pronounced the same way as "pointe" (p-oi-nt)
If you must, but seventh year of ballet is better imo.
you can tell when a pointe shoe is dead is when the tip starts to rip, and the bottom starts to turn really black!!
Well it's a really big thing and you have to do ballet for a long time to be ready to gon onto pointe
really any kind of pointe shoe is good just make sure u get fitted
Because it is a french word, it is spelt differently but but pronounced the same way as "pointe" (p-oi-nt)
A good way to break in pointe shoes is to just wear them around the house with socks over the top. Another way is to do gentle rises everyday through the ball of the foot, bending whilst on pointe and then coming back down through the ball. After a while the pointe shoes should become bendier and easier to use.
go to the pointe
Be really really good at it.
It depends... i did but i know some schools don't let you until after pre-point. Generally you are in pre-pointe shoes which are similar but not the same. Even if you are allowed in pointe shoes you shouldn't try them unless you think you are really ready or you could do yourslef some serious damage.
It really depends on the teacher - in my school the teachers aren't very specific but sometimes they don't let the weaker dancers do some of the pointe work. You must have strong enough feet and they have to have at least some flexibility to be able to go on pointe. Hope this helps you!
Study, that's the only way.
"En pointe" refers to dancing in pointe shoes. Non-pointe ballet shoes are demi-pointe shoes, and the dancing is "en demi-pointe".