The hallmark cornerstone of Wing Chun is, without question, Chi Sau. The system’s unique training method offers one the platform to unlock the potential of structure, technique, and application of developing reflex reactions so that the…
WCI Review – Sifu Fernandez – Body Mechanics & Connective Work
This issue’s reviews are looking at Chi Sau from fundamental concepts, structures and actions to developing dynamic practices that become practical fighting techniques from the ground up. In this offering, Sifu Fernandez of Wing Tchun Do,…
WCI Review – Darrell Jordan – WVTAA Chow Tze Chuen Interview
To introduce Sifu Chow Tze Chuen is to recognise he was a student of the late Grandmaster Ip Man, beginning his Wing Chun journey with the system’s patriarch in 1955 at the Lee Tat Street school…
WCI Review – Sifu Taner & Sifu Graziano – 25 – Luk Dim Boon Kwan
The coveted and revered weapons of the Wing Chun system are often a conscious, and subconscious, benchmark that one has attained a level of proficiency with their practice that they’ve been extended the privilege to learn…
WCI Review – Darrell Jordan – WVTAA 1995 Paulo Lampis Seminar
Wing Chun video submissions are often presented in a few distinct formats from seminar filmed footage to formatted presentations segmented into chapters of subject context relative to the subject(s) at hand. This offering from Sifu Darrell…
WCI Review – Moy Yat – A Trace of Ving Tsun Roots 2
The Moy Yat Family continues to present and re-release in digital format another of their first-generation copy of Sifu Moy Yat’s videos that were originally never intended for commercial release, but solely for relative lineage practitioners…
WCI Review – Sam Chan – Lok Dim Boon Gwan
Arguably, the most concise and scaled down of the weapons is the Wing Chun Dragon Pole and its form of Lok Dim Boon Gwan, which translates to, “six-and-a-half-point pole”, but translates further to multiple points of…