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Woman in barre socks up on her tiptoes.

How to Ensure Your Barre Socks Last Longer Than a Few Months

By Barre Culture, Barre-inspired fashion No Comments

Barre socks, grippy socks, sticky socks, whatever you call them, you most likely have a pair in your gym bag. The majority of studios require you to wear a pair to class either for hygienic reasons, to help you with your balance, or to keep your feet warm. You can find branded barre socks like those sold at your local Pure Barre, Barre Code, Pop Physique or Bar Method or non-branded socks like those sold by Sticky Be Socks, Tavi NoirBarreSocks, grippysox etc.

Tavi Noir founder Charlotte Hobgood.

 

Sticky socks are expensive and we want to make sure they last longer than a few months. That’s why we reached out to Tavi Noir founder Charlotte Hobgood to learn how she keeps her socks in optimal shape.

As a general rule of thumb follow the washing and care label before you wash your socks but follow these other tips to ensure they maintain their grip.

 

How to Maintain the Health of Your Barre Socks


Turn those socks inside out.

Not only will this ensure they don’t lose their grip but you will also be giving them a better clean.

Wash on cold and the gentle cycle.

You can put your sticky socks in the washing machine but avoid hot temperatures. This can cause your socks to shrink and can shorten their lifespan.

Put them into a laundry bag inside the washing machine.

For an even gentler wash, put your socks into a bag specifically designed for the washing machine, to avoid sock pilling.

Don’t use too much detergent.

Using too much detergent for your laundry load size, can cause fungal growth and can even have them smelling like mildew.

Air dry your socks or put them in the dryer on low heat.

To keep your socks soft and grippy, avoid throwing them in the dryer. Always air dry your socks on a drying rack, or line dry them.

Do not bleach or iron.

No need to iron your socks, just let them air dry.

Only wear your socks during class.

Though it’s tempting to wear them around the house, if you save them just for class this will ensure they last longer.

 

Do you have any other tips for how you maintain the health of your socks? Leave a comment below.

7 Ways to Stay Motivated During Monthly Barre Challenges

By Barre Culture, Exercises No Comments

After a season of holiday indulgence, most people are eager to hit the reset button. Lots of studios host monthly barre challenges in the new year hoping to get their clients back on track. Some studios like Barre Fitness are incentivizing participants with prizes for their 20 classes in 30 days challenge. Barre3’s All In challenge is more self-directed and Barre Body’s five-week challenge allows participants to network with each other in a closed, invite-only Facebook group. No matter what your goals are, there are tricks to help you stay motivated. Follow these tips to ensure you see optimal results at the end of your challenge.

 

1. Do it with friends.

Who says you have to do it alone? One of the best ways to keep yourself motivated is to do the challenge with a buddy.

2. Book all your workouts ahead of time.

Sign up for your classes as far in advance as you are allowed to, so you can visualize your schedule.

3. Write down positive words of encouragement and recite them to yourself daily.

You’ll find lots of great quotes if you search for them on Pinterest or Instagram. #MondayMotivation anyone?

4. Tell your friends and family that you’re doing the challenge.

If family and friends know about your goals, they’re more likely to check in with you and ask you how it’s going. This is a great way to keep yourself accountable. Take it a step further and blog about it. Putting it out there for the world to follow along with will certainly push you out of your comfort zone. Don’t have a blog? Tweet, Instagram or post your progress to Facebook.

Bingo cards from a Pure Barre challenge at Pure Barre Chandler

Source: Pure Barre Chandler

5. Put your clothes out the night before.

I mentioned this in an article on how to make early morning workouts a regular thing. If you get organized the day before, it won’t seem so daunting to get out the door the next day. This is especially true if you register for a class before 7:00am.

6. Give yourself a gold star every time you complete a class.

As silly as it may seem, give yourself a gold star after completing each class. It doesn’t literally have to be a sticker. Perhaps you check off a box or put a mark on your calendar. Whatever it is that you use to signify the completion of your classes, it will help you to visualize your progress.

7. Reward yourself when it’s all done.

If the studio doesn’t provide some type of contest or incentive, then treat yourself instead. Did you have your eye on a new pair of leggings? Perhaps wait until you complete the challenge before purchasing them so you have something to look forward to.

 

 

Holiday Gift Guide for the Barre Lover in Your Life

By Barre Culture, Barre-inspired fashion No Comments

Now that Thanksgiving is here, that can mean only one thing… the holidays are coming! If you’re like me, you have every intention of getting your Christmas shopping done early, but every year it seems like it ends up coming down to the wire.

Fret not, here are some ideas to help get you started. Use this list if you are a fan of barre and want some ideas to pass onto others or you are shopping for a barre bestie and need some inspiration.

Holiday Gift Guide 2017 Twitter Image

 

Full disclosure: I’ve placed an asterisk beside the affiliated links on this page. This means that at no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase. It helps keep the lights on.


Barre classes

This one is a no-brainer. The most obvious present you can gift a barre fan is a gift card to their favourite local studio. Packages of five or 10 classes make for a great gift and individual classes are a great stocking stuffer.


FRÉ Skincare

I first heard about this 3-step skincare routine, when I was looking for a sweat-friendly moisturizer. The kit includes a deep moisturizer with SPF30 (Protect Me), a daily facial cleanser (Purify Me) and a deep replenishing serum (Revive Me).

FRÉ is the first and only facial skincare solution for women who work out. They specialize in skincare designed for women with an athletic lifestyle.

If you are worried about clogging your pores during a sweaty sesh or a post-sweat breakout, use these products before and after your workout, without makeup.

FRE skincare product shot

 

The Honey Grip Sock from Lucky Honey*

These sweet ballet slipper-inspired socks might become your new favourite pair to wear to the barre. You can have fun with styling your socks in multiple ways since this pair comes with a removable lace-up design in their signature hexagonal silicon grip. This pair is also naturally wicking and antimicrobial. How sweet!

A pair of Honey Socks in pink from Lucky Honey

A pair of pink Lucky Honey socks in a tote bag.

 

Lustrous High Rise Leggings from Koral Activewear

There’s a reason why these liquid-like leggings are Koral’s best-selling pair. These high rise, figure-forming leggings are cropped just above the ankle and are H20 friendly.

Koral High Rise Lustrous Legging in black

 

bkr Spiked Tutu Little Ballet Pale Pink

This glass water bottle is perfect for tossing in your bag and taking sips from in between cardio bursts at the barre. The bkr Spiked Tutu Little Ballet Pale Pink is leak-proof, BPA-free, phthalate-free, fits in most cup holders and is dishwasher safe if placed on the top rack.

Spiked Tutu Water Bottle

 

Track trousers in velvet from Madewell

Sporty meets formal in these luxe velvet trousers from Madewell that come in a cool antique rose color.

Madewell Velvet Trousers in Antique Rose

 

Two-pound weights from Jasmine Fitness Pilates

Tone and sculpt your arms, legs and core with these soft weighted balls that are a nice alternative to barbells.

 Jasmine Fitness Pilates Weighted Balls 2 lbs.

 

Meet Me at the Barre Tee from Private Party

Minimalist label Private Party is known for statement tees and their latest barre-inspired tee is perfect for wearing to a workout or a post-barre brunch.

Private Party Meet Me at the Barre Tee
Mile Tank from Splits59

I love the high neckline and low armhole openings of this tank from Splits59 that comes in black or marigold. They use an active waffle jersey fabric that is moisture-wicking so it’s great for any sweaty sesh at the barre.

Splits59 Mile Tank in Black

 

Cloud Nine Backpack from Sol and Selene*

If you’re heading from work to a workout, this is the perfect on-the-go bag. This stylish and functional bag comes with two slip pockets for your gadgets and a removable laundry bag.

The exterior of a Cloud Nine Backpack in black and charcoal from Sol and Selene.
The interior of a Sol and Selene Cloud Nine backpack.

 

Barre Sock Bag – Deluxe – All About That Grip*

Carry your barre socks to class with this fun tote or use it as a nice little storage bag for 3-4 of your favorite pairs.

A small tote bag for barre socks with the words 'All About That Grip' on it.

 

Puppies & Barre Tank

What’s better than barre and puppies? How about both! This adorable racerback tank is for all the dog and barre lovers out there. It comes in heather gray and is made with a super soft tri-blend.

A racerback women's tank in heather gray made by the company Puppies Make Me Happy featuring a puppy doing a barre exercise.

What is it Like Studying the Lotte Berk Technique From Esther Fairfax? An Interview With Barre Nouvelle’s Deborah Thompson

By Barre Culture One Comment

What is it like to train under Esther Fairfax, the daughter of famed dancer Lotte Berk? Barre Nouvelle‘s Deborah Thompson knows a thing or two about that. Deborah offers Barre Nouvelle classes based on the Lotte Berk Technique and her certification course is the only, true Lotte Berk Technique-based certification in Canada.

I sat down with her to get to know more about what training under Esther was like and what she thinks of the evolution of barre.

 

A collage of photos featuring the Barre Nouvelle studio and owner.

Clockwise (from top): the interior of the Barre Nouvelle studio; Studio owner Deborah Thompson; the studio entrance.

 


How did you first hear about the Lotte Berk Technique? 
“I was a dancer with the National Ballet of Canada for 11 years. I taught for 10, 11 years and it was more of a part-time thing because I was working in an office and I would teach in the evenings and the weekends. I was really looking for something a little more that was more in tune with what I wanted to do. I had heard about this barre technique so I started to search on the internet different techniques. There was Physique 57, Barre3, Pure Barre and the list goes on and on. They kept referring to this Lotte Berk Technique or the Lotte Berk Method. I figured as a classical ballerina I should go back to the classics. I learned that in Hungerford, England it was taught by Lotte Berk’s daughter, who at the time was 82. Today she’s 85 and she still holds weekly classes in her studio in Hungerford. She’s got some people that have been coming to her classes for 50 years. She learned the technique from her mother and really wants to keep that particular technique in tact because of all of these spawns from the original technique. I worked with her [Esther Fairfax] for two weeks in England and then she certified me to teach the technique in Canada. We got along really well and she just figured that because of my training and fitness background that I would be perfect to certify and keep the name alive in Canada.”

Is it true that she’s very concerned that there are not enough people in the world to keep the technique going? “Yeah keep that technique going, keep that proper technique from her mother. Let’s say it’s an original technique and there’s things about the pelvic tilt which some of the other barre methodologies use but they’re not quite getting the understanding of the technique. I have a lot of women who come to the studio and say, oh I used to take this type of technique and we used to do this technique and it was totally a knockoff and not the original way of doing it.”

So would that be considered the modern day ‘tuck’? “Well a lot of studios in Lotte Berk [Technique] call it the pelvic tilt. It’s a pelvic tilt technique because Lotte originated it. She was a modern dancer in Germany who married an Englishman and moved to London. She was in a car accident and hurt her lower back so she worked with her orthopedic surgeon to come up with the technique which was all about lengthening the spine and a slight pelvic tilt to take the pressure off of her lower back. Also to use your abs so that was kind of the methodology that she used and refined.”

On that subject, Esther has been quoted as saying that ‘Many classes now operating in the US have been influenced by her mother’s work but lack the beauty and elements of dance and aesthetic of a woman’s body.’ In your opinion, how do you think today’s technique used in Pure Barre or other variations of it have modernized the Lotte Berk Technique? “I don’t want to name any names because I haven’t actually taken any of those classes. The only classes I have taken and really loved was BootyBarre, which is the Tracey Mallett technique. I think it comes the closest [to the Lotte Berk Technique] because Tracey used to be a dancer, so she understands that. I’m finding that the other techniques go away from the dance technique and it’s not just ballet but it can be ballet, modern, any dance technique that uses posture, a long spine, those type of things. The other methodologies are getting away from that.”

What was your experience like training with Esther? “It was great, she was lovely. We would take class first and then I would work one-on-one for about 3 or 4 hours with her because you know she’s over 80 years old so, that was you know her kind of time limit. We did that for two weeks intensively, just her and I. My certification test was to teach class to her Lotte Berk people who had been taking some of her classes for 45, 50 years, so they really knew their stuff. They could do it by themselves, right? So that was my test and I passed and she said I would love for you to certify other people.”

So she gave the seal of approval. “Yes.”

So there isn’t anyone else in the country you think that’s truly teaching it. “Not the Lotte Berk Technique. Barre has  expanded, especially in the US. It’s just rampant in the US but now it’s starting to come here [to Canada]. We’re always a little bit behind taking things up plus we have less population. There are quite a few barre technique places in Vancouver and in Toronto and now they are coming to Montreal.”

Do you think modern barre today has deviated from how it was originally intended to be performed or do you think we are going to find a resurgence of people looking up this Lotte Berk person and saying hmm, there might be something here? “Well you have to remember that, I mean as things modernize and techniques kind of evolve, obviously the Lotte Berk Technique is very much focused on what was happening in the 60s and 70s. Now we’ve learned even more about teaching different techniques that I think incorporating that technique and bringing it into today’s standard of fitness is what I try to do. I base my classes on the original technique, however I used some of the other elements that I’ve learned through fitness and the Les Mills program and you know you bring everything you can into the technique. I see some of the methodology getting away from the dance technique. Lotte Berk [Technique] started as a combination, not of ballet but using the barre with dance. That could be anything right, posture, core and leg lifts etc., strengthening, lengthening, flexibility, all of those things and then also the elements of pilates and yoga. All of those things come into play, so it’s a nice comprehensive way to really elongate the body. People sell it different ways but it’s obviously having that dancer’s body, that’s the big selling point because dancers are really well trained.”

What would you suggest to a barre newbie, someone who has never taken your class before? “I usually give them different options. I’ll give higher and lower options. I start obviously with a lower option and anybody who is new, it takes a couple of times to get used to the place, the technique of holding onto the barre like a dancer, having your arm in front of you and just about your posture and core. I think all of those things you take into the first class you do and then you move up from there so you go from the option 1 to the next option to the next level.”

Just to pivot a bit. In your experience of being a studio owner, what do you love most about running your own business? “The people! Well, you know because I’m an ex-dancer I really like the stage of a studio where I get to, you know perform. It’s great to bring the other people into the performance as well, so they are performing with me and we have a great time. I’ve had this studio now for just over two years and we have like a little community. We’re friends, it’s like a friendship community and we all love to do the barre technique.”

What is your favourite barre move? “My favourite barre move? You know, I don’t think I have a favourite really. For me every single point of the class is beneficial. The great thing about this particular class is obviously you start with a warmup, then you move to the barre, you do some exercises, strengthening exercises. I obviously being an ex-ballerina, I like all of the things that incorporate a little more of the ballet technique but that’s me personally. I think the class participants like that as well because some of them have taken ballet in their past lives or wanted to take ballet or, you know, took ballet and it didn’t work out for them or whatever.”

Have any of your clients taken classes anywhere else and then come to your studio and thought this is really different? “I have one client who took barre elsewhere. She just loves the technique because it’s a little bit closer to ballet, and it combines a little bit more cardio and stretch and strengthening which people really like and enjoy.”

*This article has been edited from the original source material for the web.

Barre Body Instagram post

5 Barre-related Instagram Accounts to Start Following Today

By Barre Culture, Just for Fun No Comments

We love Instagram for their swoon-worthy pictures of delicious smoothie bowls, inspiring quotes and other visual eye candy. Whether it’s photos from a scenic getaway or hilarious quotes, we love scrolling the feeds of these barre-related Instagram accounts that pump out crafty photos on the regular.

 

Barre Body // @barrebody

What you’ll see:
This Aussie-based barre company offers us beautifully-staged photos of different poses in idyllic environments. Their gorgeous studios make for a stunning backdrop to show off the athleticism of their instructors and clients.

A photo from the Instagram feed of @barrebody

 

Misty Copeland // @mistyonpointe

What you’ll see:
The Instagram account for the Principal Dancer with the American Ballet Theatre is on pointe! If you follow her feed, you will find glamorous original and reposted images of the prima ballerina in all her athletic glory.

A photo from the Instagram account of @mistyonpointe

 

Life By Lexie // @lifebylexie

What you’ll see:
This account keeps us lol’ing, with hilarious quotes and statements that us barre ladies (and men) can all relate to.

A photo from the Instagram account of @lifebylexie

 

Avant-Barre // @avantbarre

What you’ll see:
This San Francisco-based barre studio offers up a healthy mix of inspiring quotes and pinterest-worthy eye candy.

An image from the Instagram account of @avantbarre

 

@theBarre Studio // @atthebarrestudio

What you’ll see:
A well-curated lineup of inspirational photos.

A photo from the Instagram feed of @atthebarrestudio

Who is Lotte Berk and Why is She Considered the Barre Originator?

By Barre Culture No Comments

You may have heard of The Lotte Berk Technique but who is the woman behind the workout? Lotte Berk, born Liselotte Heymansohn in Cologne, Germany is considered to be the originator of barre. She was a renowned European ballet dancer until she suffered a severe spinal injury.

After the accident, Lotte began working with an orthopedic surgeon. It was during her recovery that she designed a series of exercises to strengthen the spine and core to assist. After making a full recovery, Lotte Berk began sharing her method with others.

Why might Lotte Berk be considered the founder of barre?

Even though Lotte trained as a modern dancer, her exercises are specially designed for non-dancers. She also incorporated use of floor and bar work into her routines.

Lotte Berk’s influence on modern barre

In the early 70s, a woman named Lydia Bach opened The Lotte Berk Method in New York. Inspired by Lotte’s workout, Lydia purchased the rights to use her name in North America and opened studios in her name, first in Manhatten, followed by Bridgehampton, Los Angeles and eventually via franchise locations throughout Connecticut.

Burr Leonard was a student and eventual owner of those franchise locations throughout Connecticut. After a decade of teaching the Lotte Berk Method, she and her partner decided that the technique they were teaching had diverged so much from the original that they decided to branch out on their own and hence The Bar Method opened their flagship studio in 2000 in San Francisco.

Physique 57’s Jennifer Vaughan Maanavi and Tanya Becker were a teacher and student duo that met while Tanya was teaching at The Lotte Berk Method’s New York City studio. Saddened by the sudden closure of the studio, the pair decided to go into business together. Today you’ll see Lotte’s influence in Tanya’s choreography, which is set to energetic and motivating music. Tanya incorporated cardio, strength training and soothing stretches to the routine, which build off of the Lotte Berk technique she once taught.

The Lotte Berk Method book cover

The cover of Lydia Bach’s 1971 book about The Lotte Berk Method.

In some way or another, every modern barre class today has either been directly or indirectly influenced by Ms. Berk’s technique. The results that studios hope their clients achieve are really just the same as they were a few decades ago. The goal of a Lotte Berk class is to firm, lengthen and shape the muscles to their optimal form. Today’s classes use the foundation that Lotte created, with a few more gimmicks. Equipment like step-up platforms, straps and balls were never part of the original technique.

You’ll see Lotte’s influence manifest in many different forms in today’s classes. For instance, many franchises including Pure Barre do not allow their clients to wear midriff-baring tops. Exposed skin to cool air make the muscles more prone to injury. Lotte Berk was a big advocate for injury prevention since her methods were created to facilitate her own recovery.

Speaking of injury prevention, the popular “tuck” that we hear so often referred to in class, was simply a pelvic tilt in the early days. It was an exercise based on dance that was meant to protect the spine.

 


Interested in taking a true Lotte Berk Technique class?

If you want the authentic experience, head to a studio that offers the closest thing to the original technique. If you find yourself in Hungerford, England, you can take a class at the studio owned by Lotte’s daughter, Esther Fairfax. If you happen to find yourself in Switzerland, take a class with Tina Graf, if you’re in the UK stop into Disco Barre Studio or if you’re in the United States, theLONDONmethod in California, LONDON BARRE in New York or Barre Bayou in Louisiana. The Good Barre also offers online classes.