Try warm water from the tap - personally I find it works fastest and requires no physical effort on my part.
yeah, but then without the hand dryer, the water evaporates slowly, stealing heat away from your hands, putting you right back into the same mess.or at least that is what happens to me...donjuan
the minus 50 celsius was torture like. Thats the coldest Ive ever felt, coldest winter I got in Montreal, thank god for heating and hot tap water in restrooms
Hi there, First of all, I am sorry if this subject has alredy been discussed on the forum, anyway I cant seem to find anything on it with the search tool, so here goes:I am a teenager piano student, and I just got out of puberty. The thing is during puberty my hands started to get really cold, and i find that to be really bad to my performance, not to mention anything about muscle lesion. I started a Gingko (Biloba) and vitamin b12 diet to start pumping more blood to my extremities
You could always learn to play with cold hands.I've found it just takes my body awhile to adjust when the weather changes and gets little bit colder. My muscles just stay tense all the time and it takes awhile to get used to the extra tension.I wonder what would happen if you went the other way and purposely made your hands and forearms cold.If you want to warm you forearms, you could cut the ends off socks and put those over your forearms. I've never done it, but it sounds like it might work. I have worn thin gloves while I've played. It helped. (along with long shirts and a coat)Are you sure it's just the cold? It could be something you're doing in practicing, and the cold only exagerrates it.