My experience with these 3 girls is because they are using their feet a lot they tend to moisturise and look after them. The softer they are the more sensitive IF they are ticklish! BUT if they are not ticklish they are not ticklish!! Gut feeling..... HIGH HOPES!!!! Good Luck!
		 
		
	 
I'm married to a professional ballet dancer and previously dated a professional figure skater. Both sets of feet are/were the equivalent of a carpenter's hands. Not ugly, but not soft and decorative either. Footrubs are/were always welcome, so, Carwash 666, that should be your first port of call. You can proceed to other frolics after or during.
Here's a post Kittentoes and I made in 2005, about a year before we married, to a poster who asked more or less the same thing:
.. Anyway, I have THE DEFINITIVE ANSWER to this query. I have her next to me- A Real Live Ballerina- NOT a student or someone who has taken a few classes, but a genuine dancer with one of the most prestigious ballet companies in Britain, aged 22 and a professional for five years. Waist length hair, elfin figure, stunningly beautiful face, etc. AND THE ANSWER IS...(over to you, my dear)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
All right, this is the Ballerina typing. The first post-coital time I adoringly ran a foot along J's bare leg he complained that it felt like he was having his skin flayed off by a cheese grater. Let me explain what 18 1/2 years of dancing do to your feet. The balls of my feet, heels, and toes, that is, all parts that touch the floor, are toughened, callused and hardened so that they resemble an armadillo's shell, or Cheese Graters, which is J's pet name for mine. Pedicures are not an option for me, because I need that armor plating. If it is removed, I will develop blisters which are far more painful than calluses. If the average dancer will reduce 3 pairs of well-made satin, leather and burlap pointe shoes to a pulp in a night's performance, just imagine what this could do to the normal uncallused foot.This does have the effect of reducing sensation in those parts of the feet-doubtless I have sustained extensive nerve damage there over the years. However, I make up for my lack of ticklishness in those areas by being excessively ticklish all over the rest of my body, including my arches, which, being quite high, never touch the ground, and therefore are callus-free. So dancing on pointe does not cause the whole foot to lose sensation, but only the pertinent areas, as previously mentioned. J wisely overlooks the armadillo-like bits and instead focuses on tormenting my other ticklish bits, which are- well, everyplace else.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 So- does this give a final and complete answer to the thread? Give the lady a giggly ovation...