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Saturday, April 6, 2013

barkley shoes for sale What Are Hard Style and Soft Style Martial Arts?




To many non-martial artists, these terms may be puzzling barkley shoes for sale. In North America, these terms are used to classify martial art styles into two main categories.

Japanese/Okinawan karate and Korean tae kwon do are generally referred to as hard styles barkley shoes for sale. Movements in both karate and tae kwon do are often linear with their forms (traditional sequence of set moves) performed with crisp movements.

Chinese kung fu styles are usually referred to as soft styles barkley shoes for sale. The circular motions of kung fu forms give them a more visually graceful or softer appearance especially when many of the movements flow from one to another.

Even Korean kuk sool won which is sometimes referred to as Korean kung fu, is often classified as a soft style since its movements are also more flowing than the stop and go of tae kwon do or karate barkley shoes for sale. This is not to say that hard styles such as karate or tae kwon do are more powerful martial arts than kung fu and other soft styles.

The term soft is a bit misleading because the power from circular kung fu moves are often hidden. Circular moves can generate just as much power as linear ones.The terms hard style and soft style came as a result of the evolution of North American martial arts competitions, particularly in forms divisions. For many years, open karate tournaments which allowed all martial arts styles, had competitors from different martial arts backgrounds compete in the same forms divisions. All equivalent level competitors, whether they used a Japanese/Okinawan karate kata,barkley shoes for sale a Korean tae kwon do pattern or a Chinese kung fu form, competed together in the same divisions. This provided a nice martial arts showcase for spectators especially at the bigger tournaments. However, some competitors and judges considered divisions with combined styles to be too complicated. For example, judges who were familiar with only Japanese or Korean styles had a difficult time scoring competitors performing Chinese kung fu forms. Sometimes competitors from different martial art styles felt that judges were being biased against them. Judging a hard style form against a soft style form was often like trying to compare apples to oranges.To help resolve these issues, many of the larger martial arts tournaments expanded to have separate divisions for hard and soft styles. This was a way to equalize things and add some more fairness to all competitors. The largest tournaments went another step ahead and further separated Japanese karate stylists from Korean tae kwon do stylists by putting them into different divisions too. This still left many kempo stylists up in the air because their particular forms have both hard and soft style elements since their movements are both linear as well as circular.