Results for “vogue femme”
Mid-90s vogue style of extreme, exaggerated feminine fluidity.
A stylized ballroom dance of sharp poses, lines, and angular arm movements.
Rolling on Vogue Tyres — gold-striped whitewalls, slab standard.
Ballroom term for a trans woman.
A lesbian who presents feminine — and owns it.
A vogue category for performers with a year or less of experience.
The stylised ballroom dance of sharp, model-like poses born in Harlem.
The five core components of Vogue Femme: hands, catwalk, duckwalk, spins & dips, and floor performance.
Mature content — open to view.
A specific judged competition theme at a ball — Face, Body, Realness, Vogue and more.
Pre-1990 vogue style of clean lines, symmetry and precision, inspired by hieroglyphs and fashion poses.
Post-1990 vogue style of rigid clicks, contortion, flexibility and precise arms control.
Vogue's exaggerated feminine strut — crossing legs, swinging hips, hands thrown in opposition.
The vogue move where you squat low on your heels and kick your feet out as you travel forward on the beat.
The vogue element where you whip a 360 spin and drop straight into a back-landing dip on the musical accent.
The vogue element where you work the floor itself, rolling, arching and posing to ooze sensuality.
The delicate, ultra-feminine, graceful approach to vogue, the soft counterpart to dramatics.
Two voguers going head-to-head in a direct duel.
The multiracial ballroom house founded in 1982 by Willi Ninja, the Godfather of Vogue.
A 1970s disco-club dance built on fast, dramatic arm throws, born in LGBTQ nightlife and folded into vogue.
The vogue element where you tell a whole story through your hands and arms.
Voguing done wrong — fake vogue with no training or ballroom grounding.
The vogue element of working the floor — rolling, arching, posing low.
Femme-butch blend: a queer woman whose look lands somewhere between the two.
The in-between lesbian — neither lipstick femme nor full butch.
A Black or Latina lesbian who blends stud (masc) and femme presentation — a stud-femme.
Verlan for 'femme' (woman/girl) — the standard French syllables flipped, now everyday slang.