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Tying Megan Thee Stallion for “Hiss”

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The latest video from Megan Thee Stallion features rope by LA Rope. Well, not “rope” exactly. Tied with red surgical tubing and suspended inside a translucent egg, it was a day filled with fun, challenges, and some extremely creative ties.

From the studio press release:

The visually captivating music video serves as a sequel to ‘Cobra’ released in
November of last year, which Douglas also directed. ‘Hiss’ features Megan’s
powerful alter-ego, Tina Snow, and conveys metamorphosis through symbolic set
design and alignment with the powerful lyrics.

Symmetry is a key element in ‘Hiss’, emphasising the duality between Megan and
Tina. This thematic divide is evident in a camera split effect of the pair, achieved
through consciously crafted hair and makeup, cinematography and editing. The
video also leans into VFX and technical camera work, such as a facing a mirrored
room reflecting both of her personas back to the audience.

Douglas once again showcases his ability to seamlessly blend cultural nuances
with striking storytelling. Douglas consulted with Shibari experts, inspired by
Japanese pop culture, and referenced the cult anime film Perfect Blue, which
explores the difference between persona and true self.

‘Hiss’ is the latest solo release from Megan through Hot Girl Productions – the
artist’s independent music and entertainment entity.

Emotion and Communication: Building Rope Progressions

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Too often, rope classes focus on ties, patterns, and technique, without really delving into how those ties can be used to create emotion, feeling, and communication between partners. One of the ways to start thinking about tying with more emotion is to focus on the concept of progressions.

Rope progressions as we teach them at LA Rope, generally speaking, have four components that create a story and allow the person tying to express a particular intention and the person being tied the opportunity to respond to that intention.

The four aspects we study are:

Anticipation

How to you build an emotional and psychological context for what is to follow. Right from the beginning, you should be laying out the framework for the culmination of your intention in the final aspect of the tie.

Layering

Once you build the anticipation, the next step is to slowly add to the tie. Each layer you add, whether it be with rope, words, positioning, or touch, helps guide your partner into the headspace that you are working to create for them.

Climax

The climax is the high point of the progression and should represent the fulfilment of your intention. It is what brings all the anticipation and layering together and offers a surprise or twist to the scene.

Release

Once we complete the tie, we begin the process of untying and releasing them. It is important to pay as much attention to untying as you do to the tying. Release is not just a physical experience, but a psychological and emotional one as well.

Putting those four aspects together gives us the basic building blocks to create a rope scene or progression. But this is not just the process of moving from one tie to the next, with a preset plan.

While your intention will remain consistent throughout the scene, how you realize it is always open to change. We watch and see how our partner responds to each rope and adjust accordingly to find the best way to create the emotional context we want to develop.

With each step we take, we need to keep a close eye on how our partner responds and follow their energy to build the most powerful context we can to allow our intention to be expressed.

Observation and attention is just as important, perhaps even more important, than the ties themselves.

Our next intermediate workshop: Emotion and Communication focuses on taking your ties to the next level.  We will use four basic ties to create a progression with particular attention to how to create a sense of anticipation, layering, and surprise in a tying session.

We will spend the first hour working through a set progression, with the second half of the class focused on having students create their own progression, using their favorite ties.

Limited to five couples.

Students should have basic experience with Yukimura style ties, from either the Hands In Front Class or the Hands Behind Class.

Shooting SZA’s “Kill Bill”

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Every so often I get the opportunity to tie for a video or film. As I often talk about in classes, it can be a complicated process because your job (and it is a job) is not to tie any way you like, it is to bring someone else’s vision to life. Unusually that is a photographer or director. In this case it was different. The person who wanted the rope bondage scene in the video was the artist herself, SZA.

I was given a photo that she liked and told that was what she wanted. To replicate that tie as closely as possible.

One of the toughest parts about a job like this is managing some of the relationships and expectations. I was told at the beginning that the on set professional riggers would handle the actual suspension, using a harness and wires and that the rope would be overlayed and the harness and wires would be removed in post.

My first task was to convince them that it would be a lot easier just to do the suspension with rope. It took some discussion and assurances about safety and comfort, but eventually the team signed off on the idea.

Second up was the rope itself. Another round of debates and I once again managed to convince them that using jute would not only make it look better and photograph, well, but that it also feel better for this particular tie.

Tying the stand in for final review

Once we got on set, I was asked to tie a stand-in so they could get some pictures of the tie and get final approval from SZA. The tie came together quickly and we did a few test shots and sent them off to the trailer for review.

The stand in was delightful to work with.

First time being tied, so that always presents some challenges. But she took to the tie well and enjoyed it.

Once we had the photos done, we hung out, waiting for approval. I entertained a lot of questions about what it is that I do, how I got started, where I learned, etc. Always a great opportunity for shibari education!

Everyone was interested, supportive, and helpful.

We must have passed the test, because after a short wait, the AD announced SZA was on the way. The set was closed and after some brief introductions, we got to the main event.

It was also her first time being tied and she was nervous, asking if it was going to be painful. I told her to let me know if it was and we could always make adjustments. As it turns out, she endured it like a pro, for something like a dozen takes.

I watched each take carefully, making sure things looked good and that SZA was safe.

When the shoot was complete, I asked if I could take a picture to memorialize the event and she smiled and enthusiastically told me that would be fine.

It was a great experience all around and I really love how the video came out.

Rope Night (January 26th, 7 p.m.)

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Come by the dojo on Thursday the 26th for a night of socializing, tying, and catching up. Have a tie you want to brush up on? Want to check and make sure that you are remembering things right? Want to meet others who love tying? This is the event for you.

Drop by between 7 and 10. The event is free, but RSVPs are required (please don’t RSVP unless you are planning to show up) and space is limited.

I’ll be showing rope videos and there will be plenty of discussion and opportunities to tie.

Come with a partner or alone. Come to tie or if you are just curious about rope.

Yukimura Style Predicament Ties

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In January, we will be offering a new intermediate workshop introducing as style of “predicament ties,” based on Yukimura’s style of rope bondage. This is an intermediate level class and requires either experience with our beginner classes or experience with basic ties in a traditional Japanese style.

The class explores various points of connection (renketsu) on the body as a way to link different ties together to create erotic predicaments.

Because of the advanced nature of the ties, the class is limited to five couples.

Participants must be comfortable with crotch rope (matanawa) and neck rope (kubinawa) ties and must have at least one length of their own rope (or be willing to purchase one at the time of class) for crotch ties. Students should also have something to cut rope with (safety shears, rescue hook, etc).

The class will have three sections: basic philosophy behind predicament ties, instruction on the ties themselves, and practice time.

The ties we will cover:

Gote suwari ashikubinawa renketsu (Seated hands behind tie, ankle to neck connection)

Gote suwari matanawa renketsu (seated hands behind, crotch rope connection)

Gote kubinawa renketsu (Hands behind connected to neck)

Hashira Kubinawa Gote renketsu (Wrists to neck tie w/Hashira)

Jowan matanawa renketsu (Upper arm, crotch rope connection)

Gote matanawa renketsu (multiple versions) (hands behind, crotch rope connection)

Momoshibari with matanawazuri (wrist to ankle tie with crotch rope suspension)

Gift Certificates for Group Classes

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We are now offering gift certificates both for private lessons and for our group classes.

You can now give the gift of rope for all kinds of occassions:

  • Holiday celebrations
  • Christmas and New Years gifts
  • Birthdays
  • Anniversaries
  • Wedding gifts
  • Or just to share the joy of rope with friends!

Gift codes for group classes allow the recipient to sign up for any beginner classes on our schedule.

Private lessons will need to be arranged by scheduling a time at the dojo for one on one instruction.

Yukimura Style Study Group

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Beginning in September, LA Rope will offer monthly meetings for the opportunity to study the style of Grandmaster Yukimura Haruki in greater depth.

Rather that a standard class or workshop, these meetings are designed to explore the conceptual foundations of Yukimura style shibari.

Each meeting will be divided into two parts. The first will be a presentation, focused on the work of Yukimura, designed to highlight a particular aspect of his style, a concept, or context for the practice of erotic rope bondage. We will explore some of his video work, photography, and writings and in doing do, work to better understand the Yukimura school of tying.

The second half of the meeting will be for participants to put Yukimura’s concepts into practice. Participants are free to work on new ties, replicate ties or scene from the earlier discussion, or practice and work on the basics of Yukimura style shibari.

The meeting is open to anyone with an interest in learning more about Yukimura’s approach to rope. No experience is required.

A partner is not required to participate, but will be useful for the second portion of the meeting if you wish to tie.

The meeting will be led by Zetus, a certified instructor in Yukimura style shibari and the primary instructor for LA Rope.

Meeting will not be progressive, meaning you may join at any time and come as often as you wish. Each meeting will have a different focus and will explore a new element of Yukimura’s unique approach to erotic rope bondage.

Our first meeting will be September 27th. Tickets are available here: Yukimura Ryuu Study Group

Online History Class: June 30th 7:00

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For those interested in the background and history of Japanese rope, I will be doing a talk “Searching for the Heart of Kinbaku” for Vox Studio on June 30th at 7:00 p.m.

Course Summary:

The history of kinbaku in Japan is a story that has been told many times. It has also been the site of conflict and struggle for grounding what kinbaku means today. Is it a noble and artistic pursuit following the glorious traditions of the ancient samurai? Is it dirty, sexual, hentai play that found its true expression in strip clubs and the Japanese adult video industry? Is it the product of kinky perverts trying to make a living doing bondage at the end of the Showa era as bondage magazines, stage shows, and VHS video started to become increasingly available?

In a way it is all of those things and more. Every story that is told about the history of kinbaku has something to teach us about what it is we do today. This presentation is not the history of Japanese rope, but rather a history. In that sense it is much more personal reflection and interpretation rather than history per se.

It is also an invitation for everyone who attends to write their own history of kinbaku, to find the stories that are meaningful and that resonate in a way that can give meaning to your own experience and practice and to imbue it with a richness that can make your connection to rope more meaningful and more personal.

My story is one of discovery. Starting with computer bulletin board systems in the 1980s, where I saw my first images of kinbaku and which ultimately led me to Japan in 2006 to start my studies of kinbaku. Along the way, I have amassed a collection of books, videos, ephemera and memories and have had countless discussions with practitioners in Japan that has led me to dig deeper into the question

“What is the heart of kinbaku?”

My story begins with the stories of three men, Ito Seiu, Minomura Kou, and Tsujimura Takashi and how their lives, as well as their styles of rope, created the basis for much of what we call kinbaku today. Along the way, I discuss Osada Eikichi and the invention of the kinbaku stage show, Nureki Chimuo’s Kinbiken salons, Urado Hiroshi and Pink Eiga films, Akechi Denki and the evolution of rope styles, and Yukimura Haruki’s style of caressing rope.

Give the Gift of Rope!

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Looking for the perfect holiday gift? Why not give the gift of rope?

LA Rope is now offering gift cards for private lessons. The gift cards allow the recipient to book a private 2 hour rope lesson at LA Rope.

Private lessons are for couples only (e.g. a partner is required).

Not only is this a great gift for your romantic partner, but also makes a fun present for adventurous friends, birthdays, anniversaries, or even as a fun wedding gift!

The gift card allows the recipient to book a two hour lesson at a time and date of their choosing. We offer classes to fit any level, from beginners to more advanced students.

We provide the space, the rope, and the instruction. All they need to do is show up!

Lessons are taught by a licensed instructor in Yukimura Ryuu. Learn more about the style of rope we teach here.

October 17th: Searching for the Heart of Kinbaku: A History of Japanese Rope and the People Who Created It

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Tickets on sale here: https://studiokokoro.co.uk/tickets/

The history of kinbaku in Japan is a story that has been told many times. It has also been the site of conflict and struggle for grounding what kinbaku means today. Is it a noble and artistic pursuit following the glorious traditions of the ancient samurai? Is it dirty, sexual, hentai play that found its true expression in strip clubs and the Japanese adult video industry? Is it the product of kinky perverts trying to make a living doing bondage at the end of the Showa era as bondage magazines, stage shows, and VHS video started to become increasingly available?

In a way it is all of those things and more. Every story that is told about the history of kinbaku has something to teach us about what it is we do today.

This presentation is not the history of Japanese rope, but rather a history. In that sense it is much more personal reflection and interpretation rather than history per se.

It is also an invitation for everyone who attends to write their own history of kinbaku, to find the stories that are meaningful and that resonate in a way that can give meaning to your own experience and practice and to imbue it with a richness that can make your connection to rope more meaningful and more personal.

My story is one of discovery. Starting with computer bulletin board systems in the 1980s, where I saw my first images of kinbaku and which ultimately led me to Japan in 2006 to start my studies of kinbaku.

Along the way, I have amassed a collection of books, videos, ephemera and memories and have had countless discussions with practitioners in Japan that has led me to dig deeper into the question “What is the heart of kinbaku?”

My story begins with the stories of three men, Ito Seiu, Minomura Kou, and Tsujimura Takashi and how their lives, as well as their styles of rope, created the basis for much of what we call kinbaku today. Along the way, I discuss Osada Eikichi and the invention of the kinbaku stage show, Nureki Chimuo’s Kinbiken salons, Urado Hiroshi and Pink Eiga films, Akechi Denki and the evolution of rope styles, and Yukimura Haruki’s style of caressing rope.

Gallery: Akane

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Images from 2013 in Ebisu, Tokyo. Model: Akane. Photographer: Yukimura Haruki

Working on a variety of poses for kata ashi zuri (片足吊り, single leg partial suspension)

What is Yukimura Style Shibari?

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Yukimura Haruki (1948-2016) was one a handful of bakushi (rope masters) who elevated the art of tying by creating his own style (ryuu in Japanese) that focused on eroticism and using rope for communication.

Like Minoruma Kou, who was his early teacher and influence, Yukimura sensei was very much of a rope minimalist, avoiding ties that were overly complicated or which relied on excessive amounts of rope.

I had the honor of studying with Yukimura sensei for six years, first meeting him in 2010, hosting him in Los Anegles in 2012, becoming a member of his school (given the name Haru Yutaka) and receiving my teaching license in 2013. I visited him regularly and studied with him in Tokyo until his death in 2016.

I believe that Yukimura taught each of his students differently, depending on who they were and how the approached rope. So my thoughts and reflections about Yukimura’s style are decidedly my own and may vary from other students’ interpretations and experiences.

Early on, one of the things Yukimura sensei told me was that it was important to learn the basics and master the fundamentals of his style and then to “make it your own.” In that sense, Yukimura Ryuu is not a set of ties, patterns, or kata. It is a way of thinking about rope, grounded is a word that he used frequently, communication.

That communication is not just what you share and impart with your rope, it is also an act of listening, of understanding what your partner is communicating with their movement, sounds, expressions, and body. Rope is not something you do to someone; it is something you do with someone.

The purpose of tying, for Yukimura, was to awaken and play with his parter’s eros, the sensual, and often playful element that makes rope bondage its erotic nature. Through fantasy and arousal, Yukimura would use rope to allow his partners to express parts of themselves that were often forced to remain hidden or repressed in everyday life.

That notion of freeing what was hidden or repressed contributes to a particular feeling that is another core element of Yukimura style rope play, hazukashii. The term hazukashii can loosely be translated as embarrassment, but it also connotes a sense of shyness, exposure, and vulnerability. That sense of embarrassment is then tied to those feelings of exposure, vulnerability, and, especially, arousal, creating a sense of erotic helplessness or surrender.

Though his ties could be simple, the psychology behind them was always complex. His focus on using rope for communication made every tying session into a conversation and every tie an exploration of feeling, emotion, and intention.

One of the key elements of this style’s technique is the use of the nawajiri, the end of the rope (literallly the ass end of the rope), which is used to convey feeling and emotion, as well as to help guide and position your partner to allow them to be tied in different ways, to be posed, or even to create and communicate additional feelings during a tying session.

It is the primary conduit we use in Yukimura style to communicate with our partner.

While many other styles focus on precision tying, carefully placed rope, and clean and deliberate ties, Yukimura’s style was much more concerned with how rope felt, rather than how it looked. The goal is always a psychological one, set by intention, fantasy, and eroticism.

In addition to being a bakushi, Yukimura was also a calligrapher of some renown. His rope style was not unlike his shodo.

As a result, his ties could have a look to them that would resemble something close to the Sōsho style of calligraphy, which focused on aesthetic beauty, rather than legibility. Where more basic styles such as Kaisho (square style) and Gyōsho (semi-cursive style), are much more clear and recognizable as kanji, Sōsho is fluid and often difficult to read, especially for those less familiar with kanji.

Like his shibari, Yukimura’s shodo was about beauty and flow, communicating its meaning through a fluid style and sense of movement that conveys personality, feeling, and emotion more than precision or clarity.

One of his personal gifts to me was a piece of shodo, which reads “Nawa Yuge” (縄遊戯) or “Rope Game” after a long discussion of what “rope games” are and what they meant to his style of rope.

For Yukimura, rope was a game of finding his partner’s eros, what it was that aroused them and made them excited. The game was to find it, engage it, and play with it, to get your partner worked up into a state of sexual excitement, desire, or even frenzy.

Doing so was what it meant to “win the game” and failure to do so was losing the game.

Rope games get easier to play with partners you are close to or intimate with, so for Yukimura one of the greatest challenges and the highest level of rope games was to tie with a new partner, using rope to discover things about them through the process of tying them. Tying someone new presents an opportunity to learn about them and to awaken their eros in new and exciting ways.

That was where Yukimura was truly expert, finding and releasing his partner’s eros.

What constitutes eros and how it manifests and is expressed is as unique as the individual being tied and can be constantly changing and evolving.

Studying Yukimura style rope is more than just learning ties, techniques, and patterns; it is about learning how to tie a person and how to create feelings and emotions that can curate an experience for them.

While the ties can be simple and the techniques are easy to learn, the deeper elements of the style, how to use those techniques to awake and play with your partner’s eros, can take a lifetime to master.