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GlitchSteven PalmerA streamlined approach to the thought of Card in Wallet / pocket idea. Fans of this type of plot are sure to enjoy this. The work and ideas involved in this could be easily adapted to your current version of the routine and maybe streamline or inspire you to rethink your current handling of the plot. 1st edition 2018, 5 pages. | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
GobsmackedCostas Damianou & Simon LovellThe magician presents to the spectator a deck of blue backed cards and shows that this is just a regular deck of 52 cards. The magician places the deck, face up, on a table. This is the last time that the magician will touch the deck. The magician invites the spectator to cut the deck approximately in half and place it next to the original pile. The spectator is then invited to select one of the two piles which is then put to one side. From the selected pile the magician invites the spectator to deal the cards face-up and to stop at ANY card they wish. This gives them a genuinely free... | $15 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Good MorningPeter Pellikaan | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Good TurnsJon RacherbaumerEven though the small packet card trick goes at least back to Hofzinser's times Jon argues that the modern small packet trick started in the 1940s when the Buckle Count was introduced by Dai Vernon and got into full swing when the Ghost Count (Elmsley Count) entered the stage. Jon writes: When the Elmsley Count became more widely known, the genie was out of the bottle. Vernon’s “Twisting The Aces” provided momentum. Marlo’s groundbreaking work on “Think Ace” and “Touch Turn” was privately circulating and then was eventually published in The Linking Ring. By the time Larry West and Verne Chesbro published Tricks You Can... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
Grand HotelJon RacherbaumerAn exploration of the Hotel Trick, aka "A Night on the Town". A trick with a good plot is half the battle. This one has an interesting plot that can be styled and modified to fit your needs. Sleight-less and sleight-of-hand versions are being taught. Jon was introduced to this trick by Persi Diaconis in the 1970s. In this ebook he has traced it back to its roots, and forward to modern variations and spin-offs. The core effect: Two Queens and four Kings are shown. The Queens are tabled face down next to each other. Two Kings are added onto each Queen to form two three-card packets. After... | ★★★★★ $15 to wish list | |
Grand PrixAldo ColombiniA closing routine with multiple climaxes. You produce the four Aces and place three of them in an envelope leaving out the Ace of Spades. Then you produce ten Spade cards in order. You then try to produce the Jack of Spades, Queen of Spades and King of Spades but the three Aces appear and the three face cards are found in the envelope. Then, all the Diamond cards appear in order, then the Club cards and the Heart cards. Amazing finale. Uses a regular deck of cards. | ★★★★★ $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Grandpa's Spirit BottleRalf (Fairmagic) RudolphA complete mental act with an impossible object! You present a bottle with a full deck of cards inside. (You can hand out the bottle for examination). The spectator selects one of five playing cards (no force!). With the heritage from your grandpa you are able to reveal any selected card. You can perform this on stage and even close up. Build the routine up to 4-5 minutes. You will learn:
| ★★★★★ $25 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Grant's Brilliant Card MagicUlysses Frederick GrantThis is a fascinating book on card magic. It shows U. F. Grant at his best. (Robert J. Smith mentioned on the cover was one of U.F. Grant's pseudonyms.) These are some of the most ingenious methods for card tricks you will find. Many are magician foolers. All are very easy to do but pack a wallop. Most of them require no sleight of any kind! You get 50 tricks in all. Some of these items can be used as show platform tricks such where a glass of ink changes to glass of clear water with a selected card inside using no chemicals. Another effect is that three people just name cards at random.... | ★★★★★ $5 to wish list | |
Grasshopper CardsAldo ColombiniYou place the Ace, Two, Three and Four of Clubs on the table in a square formation as is typically done with matrix-type effects. You cover two cards with two jumbo cards. One by one all the cards assemble under one jumbo card. You try to repeat the 'assembly' without the jumbo cards but the regular cards do not move. You turn over three cards and they are seen to be all blank. The other card is the 10 of Clubs, the sum of all the cards! [Note: Aldo originally included the three necessary blank cards and the two jumbo cards. This download does not include these cards. You will have to supply them yourself.] 1st edition 2010, video 7:47... | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Gravity CardSalvador Molano OlliveraA freely chosen card levitates on top of the deck. Then another card is passed under the levitating card to prove that there is no connection at all, you can look through and see that it is in the air. Please note that the explanation video has no verbal explanation. It includes a couple of inserted lines of text, and the rest is purely a visual explanation. Building the gimmick will require some time and effort, and you will most likely have to buy some supplies, but it is not particularly difficult to make. 1st edition 2019, length 18 minutes. | $22 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Great Million Dollar Bridge and Poker DemonstrationGeorge ThompsonFrom the foreword by Ken de Courcy: Thompson's Bridge and Poker Demonstration is probably one of the most convincing that has ever appeared. The interesting part, the discarding and drawing of cards to improve the Poker hands, is entirely believable and leads to a strong climax. 1st edition ~1947, PDF 6 pages. | ★★★★★ $8 to wish list | |
Great Scott's Ambitious Card RoutineScott F. GuinnThe Ambitious Card is visual, impossible, and engaging. It breaks the old "never repeat a trick" rule - in fact, it becomes stronger when repeated, especially as the conditions become more stringent along the way. This ebook teaches Scott's Ambitious Card routine (no surprise there, eh?). He explains not only what he does, but why he does it--why each phase goes where it does, etc. A lot of you will be adding the finale to your own routines; it's free, quickly constructed, easy to use, and it creates the same illusion as some pretty expensive marketed gaffs. It is also much cleaner and... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
Great Scott's Oil & Water RoutinesScott F. GuinnIf you're a fan of the Oil & Water plot, feast your eyes on this release, containing three takes on Oil & Water! Ed Marlo's Oil & Water plot is a modern classic of card magic, and contrary to what some magicians say, the effect can absolutely rock laymen! Great Scott's Oil & Water Routines is a 43-page ebook with 49 photos, in which Scott teaches the following in his famously clear writing style:
| ★★★★★ $15 to wish list | |
Greater Card TricksEddie JosephThis was Eddie Joseph's first card publication. As such, coming out in 1942, it represented already at that time 20 years of performing. It's unbalanced contents shows very much that it is not simply a book of card magic, but a summary of Joseph himself as a card man and his particular biases and interests. A chapter on his particular way of doing the fundamental sleights he depended upon and an entire chapter on the intelligent use of daub.
| $9.95 to wish list | |
Green CarpetAldo ColombiniA routine by André Robert, performed by Aldo Colombini. Visual magic with several climaxes! The final climax will 'kill' your audiences! Eight blue-backed cards are split into two packets. In one packet all the cards turn face up. Then the eight cards alternate face up and face down. Finally, all the cards are red-backed and with crosses on their backs! Requires four double-backed cards. | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Green Carpet v1.2Wolfgang RiebeThis incredible visual card effect was originated in the 80's and has been adapted, fine-tuned, up-dated and changed to what could easily be considered to be one of the most visual and surprising card tricks ever. The magician admits he has a special set of trick cards and shows 8 regular blue backed cards each with a huge black cross drawn on the back. However, nobody one can see the crosses, even as each is clearly shown. In fact the cards magically turn face up too. Eventually all the cards change to different color back cards with a huge black cross drawn across each back. Incredibly... | $20 $15 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Griff on CardsTony GriffithPrize-winning card magic without skill. Here's an ebook brimming over with new and original card tricks all performed without skill. Startling, practical magic that you will enjoy working with. Novel mysteries from a great close-up worker who believes that the simple way of performing magic is the best way. Dozens of expertly drawn illustrations by artist John Dyke. All items are clearly and concisely described, and easy to follow. Only one sleight is used, once, in the whole of the book.
A Demonstration on How to win at Poker | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
Guilty as Sin AcesDavid DevlinThis is a great opener for any routine or act, which uses the four aces. The inspiration for this came from David Regal's "Deep Guilt Aces". Before you chalk this up to "another ace cutting trick", take a look at the features:
1st edition 2013, 9 pages. | ★★★★★ $4 to wish list | |
Gyrater: Floating and Spinning DeckDevin KnightThe performer has a card selected, no force, and returned to the deck. The deck is shuffled and 7 or 8 cards are dealt face down into an arc shape. The performer introduces his card case and says this is his pet, CASEY. Casey is well trained and can find selected cards. That is because he is a pointer. (Pun Intended.) The performer holds the card case above his hand and says, "Casey stay." The card case remains suspended in the air. The performer says, "Chase your tail." The deck revolves 360 degrees in the air. Performer says, "Play dead," the card case drops into his hand. The performer... | ★★★★★ $5 to wish list | |
HallucinationAndrew LohHallucination is Andrew's first packet trick that is very easy to do and highly entertaining. Basically, this effect involves four Queens and you magically cause any two Queens to penetrate with the other two Queens visually. At the end, you cause all the Queens to vanish magically leaving the blank cards on the table! There is no slit or any special cut-out card at all in this effect. This ebook is not suitable for beginners. While all the moves are explained clearly some previous card handling experience is preferable. Skill Level: 3-4 (Intermediate) Reviews:
| $6.99 to wish list | |
HallucinationSultan OrazalyVisual and practical effects are rarely combined into one trick. Hallucination is a very practical and visual trick. Imagine you draw 4 points on a playing card, after which you shake the deck and they line up, and that’s not all, you shake the deck again and the points completely disappear.
1st edition 2020, length 6:27. | $9 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Hamman CountAllan AckermanThis count by Brother John Hamman allows you to hide a block of cards.
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runtime: 1min 12s | ★★★★★ $2 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Hammanesque: Hot Ice 2Ken de CourcyIn one of the New York Magic Symposium volumes there is a trick by Brother John Hamman entitled "The Lie-Detector Card Case". In it, he describes a truly brilliant-in-its-simplicity method for discovering a merely-thought-of card. Here is an alternative ending to it which, for me, makes it easier for larger audiences to see. EFFECT A spectator shuffles a pack of cards, then merely thinks of a card as the performer counts some over before his eyes. The cards are shuffled, then the performer shows the cards at the top and bottom of the pack; the selected card is not among them. Next, he introduces two paper... | $4 to wish list | |
Hammer Smashed AcesDavid DevlinThis effect has nothing to do with hammers or smashing things. It does have to do with the aces, however. The title came about because David was listening to Cannibal Corpse while He was playing around with this routine, and the song that was on was, "Hammer Smashed Face". That is enough about the weird title. Here is the effect (and what an effect!): The four aces (or four selections) are signed and placed aside. A fifth unknown card is selected and placed face down between two jokers, which are then placed into the card box. The aces are then shown once again, and are then cleanly shuffled... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list |