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Estampa

Pachanga stamping figure

PachangaLevel: Beginner1 min read3 citations

See it danced

Video demo

Demonstration tutorial on YouTube.

Estampa is a pachanga stamping figure, documented in early-1960s social-dance description as a family of forward, backward, sideward, diagonal, and tap variants within pachanga.[1] In the partnered forward form, the leader stamps forward, stamps the other foot in place, closes, and holds; the follower mirrors on the opposite foot while retreating, and the pattern is then repeated on the other foot.[1] The figure is not a slot exchange or a turn: both partners usually stay square to one another, with no intended rotation in the first four-count half and no intended rotation in the second, for a total of about 0 degrees. Pachanga itself is associated with Cuba in the 1950s, later spreading strongly through Miami and New York in the late 1950s and early 1960s.[2] Its movement quality is typically grounded and buoyant, using bent-and-straightened knees, weight into the floor, and quick rhythmic footwork rather than large travelling shapes.[3] Contemporary salsa scenes often preserve Estampa as pachanga footwork or shine material, including On2-oriented choreography, rather than as a large partnered turn pattern.[3]

How it's danced

Lead and follow cues

CountPachanga 8-count phrasing: 1 stamp, 2 stamp in place, 3 close, 4 hold; 5 repeat on the other foot, 6 stamp in place, 7 close, 8 hold. This is not an On1 or On2 salsa break map; it is a pachanga stamping phrase.

Lead

Forward Estampa: on 1 stamp the left foot forward with a grounded knee action; on 2 stamp the right foot in place; on 3 close the left foot to the right; on 4 hold. On 5 stamp the right foot forward; on 6 stamp the left foot in place; on 7 close the right foot to the left; on 8 hold. Keep the torso facing the follower, with ~0 degrees of rotation in counts 1-4 and ~0 degrees in counts 5-8, for a total of ~0 degrees.

Follow

Forward Estampa, mirrored: on 1 stamp the right foot back while facing the leader; on 2 stamp the left foot in place; on 3 close the right foot to the left; on 4 hold. On 5 stamp the left foot back; on 6 stamp the right foot in place; on 7 close the left foot to the right; on 8 hold. Maintain the same square facing relationship, with ~0 degrees of rotation in counts 1-4 and ~0 degrees in counts 5-8, for a total of ~0 degrees.

Song timingBest at moderate pachanga or salsa-shine tempos around 150-185 bpm; at 190 bpm and above the stamped weight changes usually need smaller steps and lighter articulation.

Learn first

Prerequisites

  • Pachanga pulse with bent-and-straightened knee action
  • Mirrored partner facing position
  • Controlled weight transfer on stamped steps
  • Ability to hold the 4 and 8 without rushing

Watch out

Common mistakes

  • Turning the pattern into a salsa cross-body or slot exchange instead of keeping the partners square.
  • Using the same foot as the partner rather than mirror-opposite feet.
  • Treating count 1 as a follower forward break in the forward version; the follower retreats while the leader advances.
  • Skipping the 4 and 8 holds, which removes the stamped phrase shape.
  • Stamping heavily without transferring weight, or jumping upward instead of sending weight into the floor.

Don't confuse with

Easily confused moves

  • Salsa basic: Estampa is a pachanga stamping phrase, not a two-measure salsa break pattern.
  • Cross-body lead: Estampa does not exchange slot ends or require ~180 degrees of rotation.
  • Zapateo: both involve stamped actions, but Estampa names a specific pachanga figure family in this context.
  • Tap step: in this source tradition, tap step is an Estampa variation, not the base stamped form.

Around the world

Other names

  • Historical pachanga instruction, Leona Lehman 1962

    Estampa

    Umbrella label for the stamping figure family.

  • Historical pachanga instruction, Leona Lehman 1962

    Forward Estampa

    Leader moves forward while follower moves backward.

  • Historical pachanga instruction, Leona Lehman 1962

    Backward Estampa

    Leader moves backward while follower moves forward.

  • Historical pachanga instruction, Leona Lehman 1962

    Sideward Estampa

    Stamped action is directed to the side.

  • Historical pachanga instruction, Leona Lehman 1962

    Diagonal Estampa

    Stamped action travels diagonally.

  • Historical pachanga instruction, Leona Lehman 1962

    Tap Step

    Attested as an Estampa variation using tapping instead of stamping.

  • Contemporary salsa/pachanga shines

    Estampa

    Used for pachanga footwork incorporated into salsa shines and choreography.

References

  1. 1.libraryofdance.orgexcerpt: The Estampa Steps
  2. 2.salsasecretsdance.com
  3. 3.salsavida.com

How to cite this article

Choose a style and copy the citation.

APA

Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Estampa. Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved July 4, 2026, from https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/move/pachanga-estampa

MLA

Bailar Editorial Team. “Estampa.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, getbailar.com/biblioteca/move/pachanga-estampa. Accessed 4 July 2026.

Chicago

Bailar Editorial Team. “Estampa.” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed July 4, 2026. https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/move/pachanga-estampa.

BibTeX

@misc{bailar-move-pachanga-estampa, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Estampa}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/move/pachanga-estampa}, note = {Accessed: 2026-07-04} }

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