"In the book the whole thing from the beginning to the end is one group with the rise and fall as a Foxtrot type, No extra rise on three. Commence to rise end of 1. continue to rise on 2. (up on 3 ). lower end of 3. Feather in the Foxtrot exactly the same rise and fall. The key words are continue to (rise on 2 and 3)
Foxtrot (up on 2 and 3 )"
Quickstep, you are not really making any sense here. First you say the weave from promenade has foxtrot rise, then you give waltz rise for the feather - and of course there is never extra rise on three unless syncopation means the lowering will be on four.
Waltz rise: commence end of 1, continue on 2, lower end of 3.
Foxtrot rise: rise end of 1, up on 2, up and lower end of 3.
The weave from promenade has waltz rise in the waltz... and foxtrot rise in the foxtrot - but don't listen to me, go look it up.
It's true that when rising to pass the feet from two into three the trajecrtory will be different than when rising to close them, but this seems to be below the level of detail given in the book descriptions of waltz figures. It would be very interesting to see an official description of the rise in something like an open natural turn from promenade (danced in the waltz, compared to the book listing for foxtrot only).