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Enigmaths 1Werner MillerHere you will find 20 self-working effects all based on mathematical principles. Most of them are card tricks. This is the first volume in a series of ebooks. Max Maven: "I am a fan of Werner Miller." | ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 2Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with the second volume in his series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Most of them are card tricks.
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 3Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his third volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Most of them are card tricks. A total of twenty effects for the magician looking for subtle math to enable stunning miracles. Everything is clearly explained with drawings, diagrams and tables.
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 4Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his fourth volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Many of them are card tricks.
1st edition 2010; 36 pages. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 5Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his fifth volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Many of them are card tricks.
1st edition 2010; 36 pages. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 6Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his sixth volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Many of them are card tricks.
1st edition 2010; 36 pages. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 7Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his seventh volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Many of them are card tricks. 1st edition 2011; 31 pages. Illustrated. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 8Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his eighth volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Many of them are card tricks. 1st edition 2011; 32 pages. Illustrated. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 9Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his ninth and last volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Many of them are card tricks.
1st edition 2011; 35 pages. Illustrated. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Sub Rosa 1Werner Millersub rosa – Latin for "in the strictest confidence" Welcome to the launch of a new multi-volume series on original semi-automatic ("self-working") tricks, mainly with cards. Enjoy this compilation of easy-to-do, mathbased magic without any sleight of hand, created to amaze and to intrigue both the performer and the audience. Have fun!
| $12 to wish list | |
Mental Cases with CardsWarren W. WiersbeWarren places utmost importance on the effect and uses whatever method suits him to achieve it: mathematics, stacks, crimps, sleights, etc. He credits Ed Marlo for clarifying and simplifying his work. Contents
1st edition 1946; PDF 39 pages. | ★★★★★ $5 to wish list | |
Action with CardsWarren W. WiersbeA great book of card tricks, written by magic technician and noted theologian Warren Wiersbe. The accent is on simplicity, quick results, minimum of skill, and audience appeal. Forward by Ed Marlo.
1st edition 1944, 18 pages; PDF 22 pages. | $9.95 to wish list | |
The Emerald MysteryWarner PerryAn incredible Nate Leipzig card effect, now redesigned with subtlety, instead of knuckle-busting sleight of hand. A deck of cards is genuinely shuffled. The spectator then chooses a suit and removes the corresponding thirteen cards from the deck. The performer chooses another suit and likewise removes his thirteen cards. The spectator places the top card of his packet on the bottom of his packet; the magician duplicates this procedure. The spectator places his next card face down on the table. The magician does likewise. The spectator then alternately places cards on the bottom of his packet... | ★★★★★ $4 to wish list | |
Popular Card TricksWalter GibsonWalter Gibson intended this book for the novice. All the tricks are quite easy to perform. And in the beginning under the heading "The Presentation of Card Tricks" Gibson gives very valuable advice on how to create a program and how to present it. Nevertheless, the book is so good that even the intermediate and advanced card magician will be able to learn a lot from its pages. This book was originally written by Walter B. Gibson for Houdini. Houdini's death in 1926 prevented him from putting it out, and Walter issued it under his own name. Ted Annemann considered it one of the best books in its field . .... | ★★★★★ $8 to wish list | |
How To Make Big Money Selling MagicWalt LeesThis recording gives all the secrets of grafting or pitching. Walt reveals the secrets that enabled him to earn a handsome living pitching such items as Svengali decks, the coin and glass, three card trick, and other tricks of the grafter's trade. You will find everything from the grafter's own language and terminology, to the pitches, and how to make the products. Walt Lees is a born pitchman. His voice draws you in. It plays with your mind, you are getting interested, intrigued, fascinated, excited, until you can't hold it anymore - you must have this trick - you buy it, and the pitchman... | ★★★★★ $19 to wish listMP3 | |
The Art of the Grafter: a pitchman guide to sellingWalt LeesThis ebook holds extremely valuable information for anybody who would like to become a pitchman or grafter who sells Svengali decks and other items. Even if you do not sell as a pitchman, but perform on the street or other public venues you will learn quite a bit from Walt Lees. Some of the points discussed are:
| ★★★★★ $10 to wish listPDF & EPUB | |
Four Professional Card Tricks from the Repertoire of Walt LeesWalt LeesI consider this among the very best card books ever written - and I have read an awful lot of card books. You might ask why a rather thin work from the 1980s would qualify for that high praise? There are three very good reasons for it. One, Walt Lees has selected four absolute gems of card magic. He could have added fifteen other ok routines to make it look a lot more, but he has refused to pad his work with mediocre material. Good for him. There is already enough mediocre material published. It makes it a lot easier for the reader. You do not have to look for the gems. They are already right... | ★★★★★ $15 to wish list | |
More Professional Card TricksWalt LeesEverything I raved about for Four Professional Card Tricks from the Repertoire of Walt Lees is true for this one, too. Four great routines, explained in minute detail so that you do not only know what to do, but also how to do it, and biting self-deprecating humor that it is a joy to read. One other benefit this ebook has is that the photos are of much better quality.
1st edition 1981, 37 pages; 1st digital edition 2018, 60 pages. | $15 to wish list | |
The Commercial Card Magic of Roger CrosthwaiteWalt LeesExcerpt from the introduction: It was way back in the early 1960's that I first heard the name Roger Crosthwaite. He had a series of articles running in the Gen magazine and Lewis Ganson and others of note, were frequently singing his praises. I remember reading several of his pocket picking routines and, although I never attempted to do any of them, for some reason the name of Roger Crosthwaite stuck in my mind. It was not for another ten years that I saw or heard any more of him. In the early seventies, I was working full time in Hamley's magic department in Regent Street, London, when a clergyman, who had been watching... | $14 to wish list | |
The Complete Cannibal ActWalt LeesExtract from the preface: It was in 1972 that Fred Snook first drew my attention to the "Cannibal Cards". A little later, I was lucky enough to see Matt Corin performing his version of the trick. He told me that he had published it in "Kabbala" a few months previously and that the original idea stemmed from an effect by Lyn Searles. I was able, shortly afterwards, to obtain a copy of the Corin routine. Earlier on, in 1966 I had purchased a copy of Harry Lorayne's "Close-Up Card Magic" and had, for some time, used the Jay Ose version of the Garcia "Apex Ace", described in that excellent book. When I began to work on... | $14 to wish list | |
Impossible to FindVolker DittmarImagine: The performer shuffles a deck of cards. He hands them to a spectator, who shuffles them once more. The magician turns away, and the spectator fans half the deck before him and selects any card from the fanned cards. He remembers the card and puts it back into the deck face-up - anywhere. He now makes a total mess of the cards: half of them face-up, the other half face-down. He shuffles the cards again, and again, and again - as often as he likes. Furthermore, he flips the deck so frequently that he has no idea which way his card is facing. The performer, who could not have seen... | $12 to wish list | |
Natural ScamVittorio VersaillesNatural Scam, by Vittorio Versailles, is an ACAAN effect based on Tommaso (Tommy) Guglielmi's famous Subtle Scam. Natural Scam represents a significant change to the workings of its predecessor, and will be of great interest to all those interested in the ACAAN plot. What the new changes do best is they allow you to perform this ACAAN routine in a way that is so completely natural that members of your audience will think they just witnessed a miracle. Natural Scam is completely impromptu, totally hands off, requires no prior set-up, and it is 100% natural. Is this the holy grail? You will have to find out for yourself! ... | $19.99 to wish list | |
Russian RouletteVincent GagnieuxEFFECT One bullet. Six chambers. One Ace of Spades. Six positions among five red cards. You give the cards to the participant for examination. The participant secretly inserts the "bullet" into one of the six chambers and hands you back the "gun". The cards lie on your wide-open hand, you don't even look at them. You look at the participant. He knows where the bullet is. As you deal the first card face up, you say: "clic". The card is red. Empty chamber. You keep looking at your participant. How does he feel about the next one? You deal the next one face up. Red card, empty chamber.... | $5 to wish list | |
Ghostly SecondsVincent "Vinny" BoyarA version of a strike-second deal that the author calls the "shutter" method, referring to the shutter of a camera. This version could be easier for some to perform than a classic strike-second because the coordination of the thumbs is built into the method itself. While the author claims that his method is practically self-working, there is some amount of practice necessary to acquire the knack. Still, his discovery has earned the praise of top-flight card experts, who have called it perfect in action and imperceptible to the keenest observer. The second deal is an indispensable sleight... | ★★★★★ $6 to wish list |