Hi Becky,
I also use square glass magnets. I printed blue stickers for half and purple 
for the others. I typed L1-L8, and R1-R8 for Lark Left, Robin Right. 
I’ve also put the stickers on so a portion covers one side edge so I know which 
way a dancer is facing, as that matter in some dances. 
In case the automations are not helpful and you go back to magnets.  
Also know that with time and practice, you get faster and better at seeing 
moves in your head. 

Good luck! 
Claire Takemori, California


> On Feb 9, 2020, at 9:00 PM, [email protected] 
> wrote:
> 
> Date: Sun, 9 Feb 2020 13:57:01 -0500
> From: Becky Liddle <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
> Subject: [Callers] Is there an on-line simulator to visualize/observe
>       contra dance moves/interactions?
> To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
> Message-ID: <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>>
> Content-Type: text/plain;       charset=utf-8
> 
> I doubt this exists, but thought I’d ask:
> I have seen on-line apps that demonstrate just one particular move (a ravens 
> chain or whatever) showing how each dancer moves in that single call/move.
> But has anyone yet programmed something that allows you to put in all the 
> moves of a full contra dance, so you can see how all the dancers in a contra 
> line interact?
> I’m trying to figure out movements and end effects using a magnetic 
> whiteboard, moving magnets around, but it is both painstakingly slow and I 
> keep screwing it up.
> 
> I know the ideal way to figure out end effects and make sure a dance works 
> before calling it is to get a few friends together to walk it thru, but short 
> of getting that many contra dancers in a room (I have one friend who offers 
> them pie as incentive, but I’m no pastry chef!), has anyone figured out a 
> better system for visualizing dancer interactions and end effects other than 
> magnets on a whiteboard? 
> 
> Assuming an on-line simulator doesn’t exist, I’m about to go that 
> magnet/whiteboard route, so if anyone cares to suggest the least 
> mind-boggling way to set that up (Lark 1A, Raven 1A, Lark 2A, Raven 2A, etc?) 
> do chime in! I need some way to label each dancer so that when they leave 
> their minor set, and then, say, do a left diagonal ravens chain back to their 
> partner I can tell if it really IS their own partner or if I’ve screwed up 
> again. :-( 
> 
> I find online videos can sometimes help me visualize the interactions in the 
> middle of the line (if the videographer will hold still long enough for me to 
> see a whole run-thru of the dance with one minor set), but I can almost never 
> see end effects in those.
> 
> Thanks for any suggestions!
> Becky Liddle, Toronto

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