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Dishrag Sunburst

Salsa studio adaptation of the Dishrag / Wring out the Dishrag action

SalsaLevel: Improver1 min read3 citations

Dishrag Sunburst is a salsa-timed adaptation of the broader Dishrag action, in which both partners pass under joined raised hands rather than only one partner turning while the other anchors.[1] The move is documented as a cross-genre partner-dance action, with teaching examples reported in salsa as well as bachata, cha cha, nightclub two step, swing, and barn-dance contexts.[2] In an On1 salsa setting, the figure is commonly framed over two measures: both partners take one break per measure, first opening away from each other and then returning to face, while the raised hand connection creates a compact shared turning path.[1] The rotation is best understood as a staged budget: each dancer turns about a quarter turn into the shared hand window, continues through roughly another quarter to change facing, and completes the second measure by unwinding or re-facing, for an approximate half-turn to full-turn effect depending on the version. The name is not broadly standardized across salsa regions; the attested alternate English label is Wring out the Dishrag, while English barn-dance sources also record Grandfather's Polka for a related naming tradition.[3]

How it's danced

Lead and follow cues

CountOn1 only: two measures, with one break per measure. Measure 1 uses 1-2-3 to open away, replace, and prepare the raised two-hand window; measure 2 uses 5-6-7 to execute and resolve the simultaneous underarm action. No steps on 4 and 8 except weight settling or styling.

Lead

On1 from open or two-hand hold: on 1 break away on the left foot while preserving a light two-hand frame; on 2 replace forward; on 3 begin lifting and shaping the joined hands into a clear overhead window. On 5 break away on the right foot while initiating the shared turn path, rotating about 1/4 into the window; on 6 continue under the joined hands for roughly another 1/4 to 1/2 turn as space allows; on 7 lower the hands only after both partners have re-faced or clearly resolved the shared axis.

Follow

On1 from open or two-hand hold: on 1 break away on the right foot, matching the leader's away action from the follower's own body perspective; on 2 replace forward; on 3 keep the elbows toned and allow the raised hand window to form without pulling down. On 5 break away on the left foot as the shared turn begins, rotating about 1/4 into the window; on 6 continue through the raised connection for roughly another 1/4 to 1/2 turn; on 7 settle to face the leader or the agreed exit direction as the hands lower.

Song timingBest at moderate social salsa tempos, about 150-185 bpm. At 190 bpm and above the shared overhead pathway requires smaller steps, lower arm travel, and earlier preparation; crowded floors make the figure less suitable.

Learn first

Prerequisites

  • On1 open break
  • Two-hand hold frame
  • Basic underarm-turn safety
  • Awareness of shared overhead hand paths

Watch out

Common mistakes

  • Breaking toward the partner on count 1 instead of opening away from each partner's own body perspective.
  • Forcing both hands overhead before count 3, which compresses the frame and traps the shoulders.
  • Dropping the hands before count 7, cutting off the follower's reorientation and the leader's own exit.
  • Treating the action as a single whipped turn rather than staged rotation through entry, passage, and re-facing points.
  • Using the slot term for casino or circular traffic in scenes where the figure is being danced as a non-slot studio pattern.

Don't confuse with

Easily confused moves

  • Snake: a related family action in which one partner turns under the joined hands at a time rather than both turning simultaneously.
  • Inside turn: conventionally the follower's left or counter-clockwise underarm turn, not the same two-person Dishrag action.
  • Outside turn: conventionally the follower's right or clockwise underarm turn, not the same two-person Dishrag action.
  • Cross-body lead: a foundational salsa travelling exchange of slot ends, not a simultaneous two-hand underarm action.
  • Paso cruzado / cruzado: Spanish terms that usually refer to crossed footwork, not an attested salsa name for this figure.

Around the world

Other names

  • English-language salsa studio / cross-genre social dance

    Dishrag

    Attested as the base English name for the partner action; 'Dishrag Sunburst' appears to be a salsa-studio elaboration rather than a widely standardized regional label.

  • English-language salsa studio / cross-genre social dance

    Wring out the Dishrag

    Attested alternate English name for the same general action.

  • English barn-dance tradition

    Grandfather's Polka

    Attested barn-dance alternate label associated with the Dishrag naming tradition; not a salsa-regional name.

References

  1. 1.haroldsears.com
  2. 2.youtube.com
  3. 3.barndances.org.uk

How to cite this article

Choose a style and copy the citation.

APA

Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Dishrag Sunburst. Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved July 4, 2026, from https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/move/salsa-dishrag-sunburst

MLA

Bailar Editorial Team. “Dishrag Sunburst.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, getbailar.com/biblioteca/move/salsa-dishrag-sunburst. Accessed 4 July 2026.

Chicago

Bailar Editorial Team. “Dishrag Sunburst.” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed July 4, 2026. https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/move/salsa-dishrag-sunburst.

BibTeX

@misc{bailar-move-salsa-dishrag-sunburst, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Dishrag Sunburst}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://getbailar.com/biblioteca/move/salsa-dishrag-sunburst}, note = {Accessed: 2026-07-04} }

Editor-in-Chief: Paul Thomas Plawin

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