Pointe shoes



         


[[Image:Parts-of-a-point-shoe.png|thumb|left|250px|Parts of a pointe shoe by ohka- ]]

Pointe shoes (also known as toe shoes) are a special type of shoe used by ballet dancers. They allow a ballerina to dance on the tips of her toes (en pointe). Pointe shoes are normally worn only by female dancers, though male dancers may wear them for certain roles, such as the ugly stepsisters in Cinderella or Bottom in A Midsummer Night's Dream.

Pointe shoes are usually satin and have a somewhat blocky look about them. The shoes have two important structural features that allow the dancer to dance on the tips of her toes:

Young girls usually start dancing en pointe at age eleven or twelve. Before this, their bones have not stopped growing; serious foot deformities can result from starting pointe too early. Girls must not go up en pointe until the bones of their feet are fully developed and the muscles in the arches, legs, pelvic area and abdominals are strong enough to bear the stress. They should also have had several years at least, of proper training. All of this requires careful evaluation on the part of the teacher. Note that we have three requirements here: bones, muscles, and training.

Once a dancer is ready, preparation for pointe work is a slow and gradual process. At first, it is just strengthening exercises at the barre - for example, simply going up on pointe and coming back down, and then introducing variations in speed and position whilst doing this - for perhaps no more than five or ten minutes. It is only after six months to a year of this that one can start dancing on pointe in the center. The entire process takes time and close supervision by the teacher.

Dancing en pointe can place severe stress on the dancer's feet, common injuries related to dancing en pointe are:






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