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Shadow CoinsEric DeCampsA beautiful compact routine wherein three coins vanish and then magically reappear, one coin at a time. An instant classic. Recorded live at the Convention at the Capital 1998. runtime: 8min 2s | $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Silver QuickDerek DingleThis is a classic Dingle - strong magic but not easy. Four coins travel magically from the performer's hand to the spectator's hand. Brilliant routining from a master. Recorded live at the Convention at the Capital 1998. runtime: 5min 47s | $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Ninja Coin & Ninja KeyChad LongTwo extremely magical effects that make it appear you have the dexterity of a Ninja Magic Master. Flip a coin high in the air and appear to catch it deftly between your thumb and forefinger. Or toss your keys in the air and catch the right key at your fingertips every time. It looks absolutely impossible, but it is easy to do. Recorded live at the Convention at the Capital 1999. runtime: 6min 39s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Body PiercingGregory WilsonThis is a strong one coin routine requiring a shell. The coin repeatedly penetrates your hand. Recorded live at the Convention at the Capital 1999. runtime: 6min 52s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Spellbound to PleaseR. Paul WilsonScotland's top sleight-of-hand artist gives up one of his pet routines. It looks like real magic. A copper coin changes to a silver coin and back several times. Surprisingly there are no really difficult moves. You will need a copper and a silver coin, but the spectators only see one at any given moment. And Paul's clever handling eliminates the thought in the spectators mind that there could be two coins. Recorded live at the Convention at the Capital 1999. runtime: 4min 46s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Epic Flight(Benny) Ben HarrisThe odd scientific principle discovered by Harris in 1980 makes an amazing coin transposition possible! Two coins are displayed. One is marked with a large cross with a permanent marker and a spectator confirms that the cross will not rub off the coin. In full view, the marked coin and the plain coin transpose through the back of a spectator’s own hand. Fully examinable, easy to do. The scientific principle makes it all work.
1st edition 1980; digital edition 2009; 14 pages. | ★★★★★ $8.95 to wish list | |
A Fistful of DollarsGregory WilsonSnap your fingers to produce during the snap a coin at your finger tips. Greg does this three times and then vanishes the coins one by one. The move to produce a coin while snapping is Doug Wick's Snap Production. Recorded live at the Convention at the Capital 2000. runtime: 13min 13s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Miser's MiracleJerry AndrusWatch and learn Jerry's masterpiece of coin magic. Four silver dollars are produced one at a time, first from between two freely chosen cards, and the last two coins from a single playing card which is torn smaller and smaller. There are no difficult moves in this routine. The ingenuity of Jerry is how he steals, hides and moves the coins behind pieces of cards. Recorded live at the Convention at the Capital 2000. runtime: 7min 25s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
The Great PenetratorRich MarottaA borrowed coin magically penetrates three times a solid coaster resting on top of a glass. Recorded live at the Convention at the Capital 2001. runtime: 3min 2s | $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Pocket CoinsDavid NeighborsYou place a ripped off empty jeans pocket on the table. Magically you take three coins one by one out of it. You magically make them disappear and appear inside/under the pocket. The climax is that all three coins disappear inside the pocket. You will need two coins and a matching expanded shell. The video includes a detailed explanation of the "Palm to Palm", "Classic Palm to Fingerpalm Transfer" and "Toss Up Production" moves. runtime: 24min 37s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Coin Falling UpJohn CorneliusThis is an independent reinvention of Arthur Buckley's muscle pass by John Cornelius. John turned the move into a showpiece by itself. runtime: 3min 20s | $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Peripatetic CoinsLarry Jennings | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
In FlightAlan RorrisonThis is a neat card and coin to pocket effect. Have a spectator grab a coin and sign it on both sides. You vanish it, or as Alan likes to say 'make it invisible'. Have a spectator select a card, and also the card vanishes while rubbing it on the leg. Both card and coin magically traveled to your pocket. However, the unbelievable miracle is that the signed coin is actually inside the spectator selected card. The card has to be peeled open like an in-flight envelope to get to the coin. Alan teaches every detail. A unique and unforgettable miracle. runtime: 19min 34s | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Metal MorphasisAlan RorrisonHave a spectator take out a coin and have him sign it. Show an empty card case and drop the signed coin into it. The card case is closed and put on the spectators stretched out hand. Then you bring out a bottle cap or take one that is lying around and have it signed as well. The bottle cap is lying on the table. You take the card case held on the tips of your fingers - to make clear that no sleight of hand is possible - and tap the bottle cap. The bottle cap instantaneously transforms into the signed coin. The transformation is incredibly visual and happens right in front of the spectators... | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
The MintAlan RorrisonThis is a really clever visual effect. I love it. Present a 'mint sheet' (a piece of aluminum foil). Borrow a coin and press the coin into the mint sheet. The impression looks just like the coin. But of course it is just an impression not a real coin - or is it? Hand the coin with which you created the impression back to the spectator. You only have the aluminum foil with the coin impression. With your thumb you squeeze and pull the impression of the mint sheet and create a new coin. The impression has transformed into a real coin. You do the same with the other side of the coin to 'mint'... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Coin Thru HeadTony ChapparoPass a borrowed and signed coin through your head. You put it into one ear and take it out from the other ear. It is the same coin. No switches whatsoever. An unusual effect! The method is pretty cool but you have to watch your angles and you have to prepare a few things. Actually this can really only be seen from the front - head on. It is a great effect for a single spectator or a small group of spectators or for TV work. Tony mentions in the manuscript that initially this should have been released jointly with Paul Harris as a DVD because he was very interested in the method. But this... | ★★★★★ $2 to wish list | |
Rupert Howard Magic Course: Lesson 08: Sleight of Hand with CoinsRupert HowardTable of Contents
1st edition 1931; 22 pages. | ★★★★★ $4 to wish listPDF_facsimile | |
Easy CoinsAldo ColombiniCoin magic is usually very difficult to perform, and requires sleight of hand and manipulation. In this ebook, you will find seven very strong coin routines requiring NO SLEIGHTS AT ALL and totally impromptu using ordinary coins. We predict you will never stop doing them. Although in the description Aldo use American coins, any coins from any country can be used and can be borrowed from the spectators. 1st edition 2008; 14 pages. | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
Coin TricksThomas (Tom) OsborneFrom the introduction: In the quiet sanctum of one’s home, or in a circle of intimate friends, a person performing an effect in magic may be perfectly at ease, but under fire before a critical audience it may be a different story. More times than I care to remember I have seen this happen; this is especially true of the spare-time Magician and, believe me, it is my sincere desire to help overcome this failing. But, I also believe a person can be taught to perform Magician’s tricks in a manner that is quite pleasing. It is with this thought in mind that I have consented to put into... | ★★★★★ $7 to wish list | |
The Gemini BookStephen TuckerStephen Tucker is the magician who prefers a clever gimmick over a difficult sleight. That is not to say that he isn't capable to execute some of the most difficult sleights - and you will get a taste of those in this ebook, too. But the real strength here are Stephen's clever gimmicks and uses for common items and the fun and amazing routines he constructs with them.
1st edition 1983, original 73 pages, PDF 109 pages. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Great Scott's Matrix RoutinesScott F. GuinnDo you like the Matrix effect? Here are four versions of this classic effect of coin magic, each with "the Guinn touch", plus an entire comedy script, straight out of Scott's professional performing repertoire, meaning you're really getting FIVE routines! This fun, funny, and exciting story will grab your audience's attention and lock it in place right up to the big finish! This ebook has recently been drastically expanded to include extra nuances and finesses. In addition, all the required moves and sleights are explained, in the lauded clear style Scott has become famous for. The table... | ★★★★★ $15 to wish list | |
My Best To You: CoinsScott F. GuinnThis is Volume Two in the "My Best to You" series. Containing 13 gems of coin magic excerpted from Scott's long out of print books, this material has been edited and updated, with loads of tips, finesses, new handlings, and additions that weren't in the originals. Contains:
| ★★★★★ $22.50 to wish list | |
The Coin Roll (Steeplechase)David RothThis is a beautiful flourish where one or more coins roll across the back of the fingers. Both Nate Leipzig and Allan Shaw claim to have invented this move. Al Goshman did a wonderful version where a coin rolls up and down his hand. Extreme variations go as far as rolling eight coins, four on each hand. runtime 6 minutes 38s | ★★★★★ $2 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
SilverdustedScott F. Guinn#2 in the Sit-Down Coin Magic series, this is one of Scott's most acclaimed coin routines. You introduce a saltshaker filled with "coin concentrate" (silver glitter). You sprinkle a little of the dust onto your obviously empty hand, squeeze, and a half dollar appears in your hand! You decide to demonstrate the special properties of this coin, making it vanish, reappear, penetrate the table, turn into a foreign copper coin and back to a half dollar! Finally, with a squeeze and a crumble, the coin dematerializes back into the shaker, and your hands are absolutely empty! This routine is visually... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list |