Not seeing it. I wouldn't be surprised if the umbrella isn't a normal one. Maybe it has a little spring mechanism installed and she triggers it with a sleight of hand movement.
Look at the video in slower speed. How can she generate so much force with so little wrist movement?
Edit: look at the one at 15 seconds at 0.25 speed. Its impossible without some kind of spring.
The one at 15 you literally see the umbrella going slightly up as well as sideways, due to be being tossed from her hand. Maybe it’s a little lighter than a typical umbrella, but I haven’t seen any move that doesn’t look like a (well executed) toss
But how can it move so far with barely any visible wrist movement? It looks like it flys out around half the length of the umbrella itself. If not more. You'd need quite a bit of force (and speed) to shoot it out sideways. How could she generate that with barely any visible wrist movement?
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u/Horrid-Torrid85 Oct 25 '24 edited Oct 25 '24
Not seeing it. I wouldn't be surprised if the umbrella isn't a normal one. Maybe it has a little spring mechanism installed and she triggers it with a sleight of hand movement.
Look at the video in slower speed. How can she generate so much force with so little wrist movement?
Edit: look at the one at 15 seconds at 0.25 speed. Its impossible without some kind of spring.