About
Welcome to Pointe Pilates Studio,
Hi, I’m Veronique, the lucky owner of Pointe Pilates Studio.
Whilst we are one of the longest standing Pilates Studio on the Sunshine Coast, we have come a long way in defining our studio to be the best we can be for our clients. We’ve moved away from a one size fits all 14 reformer bed studio, to create a small space focusing on true pilates method and building a community centred club for clients to work on themselves. Pointe is a beautiful boutique studio hosting a maximum of 6 clients in our group studio, along side of a Private studio for those wanting to work 1:1 or in a small group. We are in the heart of Maroochydore, offering our clients a peaceful setting away from the hustle and bustle, allowing themselves an hour to forget the world.
No longer just a Reformer Studio, we offer the full suite of Pilates apparatus, rewarding our clients practice and commitment by using only the best equipment the industry has to offer. Our group classes consist of Reformers, Wunda Chairs & Towers, making private equipment accessible to all and experiencing the full range and benefits that the different apparatus can offer to their practice.
Our team of specialised Instructors have or are working towards the highest level of education that the Pilates Industry offer, having 100’s of hours of self Mastery, observation & teaching hours under their belts. Continuing education is always encouraged and offered, to ensure our instructors stay up to date and passionate to help cater to our clients health and wellbeing needs. Classes are friendly, full body and align with the Pilates principals. Being a smaller class setting allows our instructors to modify & progress clients when needed & to ensure correct alignment, muscle activation & control. There is always a way to do an exercise, but then there is the right way, and that’s what we do best at Pointe, the right way.
Pointe is here 7 days a week with over 45 classes on offer. Our instructors will guide you through true Pilates repertoire that will have you feeling energized & toned whilst building a stronger, more mobile & flexible you. For those a little shy on Group classes we offer private, semiprivate and now Functional Movement classes, for those wanting to work on mobility, balance and control, which have a maximum of 3 per class.
HISTORY OF PILATES,
Pilates was developed during the first half of the twentieth century by Joseph Pilates. His father was a gymnast, his mother a naturopath, and he studied a range of exercise forms from Eastern and Western cultures including Yoga, body-building, and various forms of martial arts including jujitsu. The Pilates method was developed with a variety of equipment designed to advance the stretching, strengthening and body alignment that came from the non-equipment based mat work. Over time a full complement of equipment was developed including the Reformer, Cadillac, Wunda Chair, high ‘electric’ chair, Ladder Barrel, Pedi-pole and Spine Corrector.
In about 1925 Joseph Pilates immigrated to the USA from Germany. He founded a studio in New York with new wife Clara and taught students well into the 1960’s. Several prominent New York dance teachers regularly sent students to the Pilates studio for training and as the world of ballet started to actively embrace the Pilates method, many New York society women followed. As the first and second generation of students from the Pilates studio left and travelled the ‘Pilates’ method of physical fitness was born and is now embraced by tens of millions world wide.
PILATES PRINCIPLES,
For many, these six principles are the foundation of the Pilates approach to exercise. Their application to the Pilates method of exercise is part of what makes it unique in the fitness world.
BREATHING: Pilates, like yoga, calls for complete, thorough and purposeful inhalation and exhalation. But in Pilates, unlike in yoga, inhalation is through the nose and exhalation through the mouth. Conscious breathing and specific breathing patterns assist movement by focusing the attention and direction of the body and by delivering oxygen to the muscles being used. Full breathing also assists in removing non-beneficial chemicals that may be stored in the muscles (Pilates 1945).<br /> Visualize the capacity of the rib cage expanding three-dimensionally with each breath. In three-dimensional breathing, the ribs expand forward, sideways and backward during each inhalation. Pilates reminded practitioners to fill (their) lungs from the bottom and empty them from the top.
CENTERING: In Pilates, all movements originate from the center of the body, which is located in the pelvis; just bellow the navel (inside). Anatomically, our center connects several large muscle groups and refers to the musculature located deep within the abdominal area. From our center we support our spine and major organs, strengthen the back and improve alignment and posture. With a properly developed center we are less vulnerable to fatigue and lower-back pain.
CONTROL: In Pilates, control is essential to the quality of every movement. Overexertion of the muscles in not a principle of Pilates. The underlying assumption is that exercise motions and movements performed without control can lead to injury, but exercises performed with control produce positive results.
PRECISION: Movement precision builds on concentration. Precision is achieved by clearly moving, directing and placing the body and its parts. Realize that every movement has a purpose and every cue or instruction is important to the success of the movement.
FLOWING MOVEMENT: Dynamic fluid movement makes Pilates different from other exercise techniques. Smoothness and evenly flowing movement go hand in hand, assisting the connections (or transitions) between movements. An exercise should have a specific place where it begins and ends, with a seamless middle of precise motion emphasizing grace and control. Don't allow jerky, quick or under movements in yourself or your participants.
CONCENTRATION: The mind-body connection is at the very core of Pilates, and the key to coordinating mind and body is concentration. In this discipline, the focus is on careful, precise and slow foundation work. Before you perform or teach a movement, organize your thoughts and cues to encourage full-body awareness. During each movement, stay aware, not only of the moving body part, but also of what the rest of the body is doing.