Mermaids

Mermaid for hire

Mermaids are Mythical creatures with long hair and beautiful tails. Most girls want to be one -with the freedom of swimming all day and with beauty that takes your breath away. Our Mermaids create life long memories

 

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Mermaid for hire

Mermaid for hire

Mermaid for hire

Mermaid for hire

Interesting facts on Mermaid for hire

A woman wearing a golden costume mermaid tail and a bikini lies on the beach.
Woman wearing a costume mermaid tail (Miami, Florida, 2003).
A mermaid performance in Jakarta, Indonesia

Mermaid for hire  (also referred to as artistic mermaidingmermaidry, or artistic mermaid performance) is the practice of wearing, and often swimming in, a costume mermaid tail.[1][2]

In the beginning of the twentieth century mermaiding was sometimes referred to as water ballet, but it is not currently a term that is commonly used. Mermaiding should not be confused with modern synchronized swimming, although there can be some overlap if a mermaid performance troupe is performing a synchronized routine.

It is difficult to determine exactly where the term “mermaiding” was coined; but some of the first professional freelance mermaids appeared on the world scene around 2004, Hannah Mermaid, Mahina Mermaid, and Mermaid Linden, who were all playing with the term. A little later on, the term was brought to a wider use and community by Iona the Mermaid, co-founder of MerNetwork.com. Newer professional mermaids like the famous Mermaid Elle have made mermaiding more popular and mainstream by performing at celebrity events and featured on TV, music videos and magazines.

Mermaiding is both a profession and a hobby. Professional mermaids will often swim in live, filmed, or photographed productions or shows and can be hired for special events. Nonprofessional enthusiasts swim in tails at their local pools if the pool allows it, lakes, rivers, and seashores, or take part in mermaid-themed photo shoots, birthday parties, or mermaid meetings with other Mers. Mermaiding is popular with all ages and genders. Mermaiding practitioners are sometimes called mermaidsprofessional mermaids, or occasionally, water ballerinas. Within the community, mermaid or merfolk can be shortened to “mer“. Mermaiding is often seen as a form of extreme cosplay due to the nature of crafting the tails and other prosthetics used by practitioners. There are several tail-making companies supplying the community with everything from fabric tails to full SFX prostheses costing thousands of dollars.

History Mermaid for hire

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Annette Kellerman

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Annette Marie Sarah Kellerman (6 July 1886 – 6 November 1975) was an Australian professional swimmer, vaudeville star, film actress and writer. She was one of the first women to wear a one-piece bathing costume, instead of the then-accepted pantaloons, and inspired others to follow her example.[3] In 1902, Kellerman decided to take her swimming seriously and subsequently won the ladies’ 100 yards and mile championships of New South Wales in the record times of 1 minute, 22 seconds and 33 minutes, 49 seconds respectively. In that same year, her parents decided to move to Melbourne, and she was enrolled at Mentone Girls’ Grammar School where her mother had accepted a music teaching position.[4] During her time at school, Kellerman gave exhibitions of swimming and diving at the main Melbourne baths, performed a mermaid act at Princes Court entertainment centre and did two shows a day swimming with fish in a glass tank at the Exhibition Aquarium.

In June–July 1903 Kellermann performed sensational high dives in the Coogee scene of Bland Holt’s spectacular, The Breaking of the Drought, at the Melbourne Theatre Royal.[4] She is often credited with inventing the sport of synchronized swimming after her 1917 performance of a water ballet in a glass tank at the New York Hippodrome.[5] She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The majority of Kellerman’s films had themes of aquatic adventure. She performed her own stunts including diving from ninety-two feet into the sea and sixty feet into a pool of crocodiles. Many times she would play mermaids named Annette or variations of her own name. Her “fairy tale films”, as she called them, started with The Mermaid (1911), in which she was the first actress to wear a swimmable mermaid costume on film. She designed her own mermaid swimming costumes and sometimes made them herself. Similar designs are still used by The Weeki Wachee Springs Mermaids, including her aquatic fairy costume first introduced in Queen of the Sea (1918).

Esther Williams Mermaid for hire