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Marlo's Repeater Card to PocketAllan Ackerman | $4 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Marlo's Matching RoutineAllan AckermanThe deck is shuffled. Spectator cuts off a small packet and sets it aside. The performer selects one card from the remaining cards. It turns out that this is the mate card to the card on the bottom of the spectator cut packet. The same procedure is repeated and again the performer is able to pick the mate card. In ever more impossible ways the spectator selects cards which turn out to be located next to their mates. This routine was first published in Faro Control Miracles. It uses the stay stack principle.
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runtime: 16min 52s... | ★★★★★ $4 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Marlo's Double Color ChangeAllan Ackerman | $3 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Marlo's Chameleon AcesJon RacherbaumerThe basic plot of the "Chamele Aces" was developed in the late 40s by Edward Marlo, who shared ideas about this motif with Neal Elias in 1949. Elias wrote notes regarding the methods they explored, which he and Marlo then filed away. Neither published the "work;" however, Marlo performed an impromptu version at a Pittsburgh magic convention in 1955. Earlier the same year, Roy Walton published his version of "Chamele Aces" in The Gen (February-1955: Volume 10 - Number 10). The basic Chamele Aces plot is four red-back and four blue-back Aces transpose one at a time. 1st edition 2008; 80 pages. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $15 to wish list | |
Marlo's Biddle Switch OutAllan Ackerman | $2 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Marlo: Low-Down and CozyJon RacherbaumerThis ebook features six presentations by Edward Marlo, one of the most prolific producers of card magic ever known. My criteria for selecting these six presentations was to pick effects that stressed subtlety and psychological cunning and required little or no difficult sleight-of-hand. The irony here is that such tricks are seldom associated with Marlo, even though he devised scores of easy, semi-automatic tricks during his career. But don't despair. The ones in this ebook run a gamut. Cozy Card to Case is a subtle version of an ancient trick dating back to Walter Gibson's Popular Card Tricks. Most versions are based on miscalling a... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
Marlo Without TearsJon RacherbaumerFrom the Foreword: MARLO WITHOUT TEARS began as a flip notion five years ago. My original plan was to prepare a salmagundi of previously published material by Marlo that was easy to do; to select methods which stressed subtlety and psychological cunning and required no difficult sleights. There is a neat irony here because such material is not associated with Marlo. The prevailing assumption about Marlovian magic focusses on its difficulties, complexities, and textual protraction. The look of his books are intimidating: pages of explanation, dense detail, allusions to other notes (published... | ★★★★★ $20 to wish list | |
Marlo on Card to WalletJon RacherbaumerThis treatise is a compilation of Marlo's methods for performing a card-to-wallet, incorporating his Exclusive Card in Wallet (1961) with methods published in Ibidem, [lc=4446 Hierophant, Card Finesse, Marlo's Magazine, and other previously unpublished but related methods. This material was discovered in a thick folder among Marlo's private effects. The idea of causing a selection to disappear from the deck and then reappear elsewhere is almost as old as playing cards. Reinhard Müller has painstakingly researched the basic effect classified as "Card Found in Some Object," which was being performed (in some form)... | ★★★★★ $15 to wish list | |
Marlo Multiple ShiftAllan AckermanThis multiple shift is by Ed Marlo. It operates in two phases where in the first phase you bring the cards together that were inserted in different positions in the deck. And in the second phase, you bring these cards to the top.
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runtime: 1min 50s | ★★★★★ $2.50 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Marlo Key Card ReplacementAllan Ackerman | $2.50 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Marlo in the United KingdomPaul GordonMarlo in the United Kingdom complements Marlo In New Tops and Marlo in Linking Ring. It includes his contributions to The Gen, Pabular and The Pentagram.
1st edition 2005, 79 pages. | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
Marlo BreakAllan AckermanOnce you have a break you want to handle and display the deck such that it appears to be impossible to hold a break. Here is one sequence of bends and riffles developed by Ed Marlo and published in his Card Control Series from the 1950s.
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runtime: 53s | $2 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Marlo Bottom PalmAllan AckermanDeveloped by Ed Marlo, it is a well-covered method to palm one or several cards from the bottom into a left-hand magician's palm.
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runtime: 1min 53s | $2.50 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Marked for DeathScott F. GuinnScott has been holding this close to the vest for more than a decade. A small part of his do-it-yourself marked deck system was published in his long out of print book "Never Miss a Trick," but in this manuscript Scott gives you the full meal deal, explaining the entire system. Along with instructions on how to make up your own decks (in just minutes!), Scott gives you memory hooks to make learning the system as quick and painless as possible. Then he gets into the routines--and what routines they are! Killer routines that will slaughter your audience! Stuff that seems absolutely impossible... | ★★★★★ $20 to wish list | |
Mark of the Devil: Six Slick Routines with a Marked DeckPaul VoodiniThis manuscript features six routines from Paul Voodini, all utilizing a marked deck. As well as fully explaining the routines, Paul also discusses many subtleties that allow the performer to use a marked deck with confidence and the 'tricks of the trade' that mean the spectators never suspect for a moment that there is anything 'funny' about the cards. The routines included are: The Keeper of Secrets. The performer is able to correctly divine a chosen card despite the spectator desperately trying to keep its identity a secret. Thought Transfer. Performer and spectator work together... | ★★★★★ $6.50 to wish list | |
Manipulation with CardsPekiPeki, a highly decorated magician, explains here how you can create and learn a successful card manipulation routine for stage. This video is a German video dubbed by Peki to English. Contents:
| $25 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Mamma MiaAldo ColombiniAldo Colombini has selected eighteen wonderful card effects for his first ebook. Most of these are completely new and have never been published before. Some have seen print in largely unknown periodicals. Aldo is a master in creating strong effects with little finger flinging. We also included some interesting snap shots from Aldo's magic life. 1st edition, 2002, Lybrary.com.
| ★★★★★ $15 to wish listPDF & EPUB | |
Making WavesJohn GelasiYoung magician John Gelasi presents another experiment in a classic plot: “B’wave”. This new two-packet “B’wave” effect called Making Waves combines all of the best elements of countless variations into one stunning packet trick. Best yet, you end completely clean, and all the cards can be examined immediately at the conclusion of the trick! Here’s the basic effect: Two packets of cards are used: one blue, and one red. The audience is asked to imagine that the red cards are the four aces, and that the blue cards are the four Queens. An ace is touched (free choice), say... | ★★★★★ $2 to wish list | |
Making Tactile Readers Using Boss WorkT. HayesA new permanent tactile marking method, which is easier to feel and less visually noticeable compared to a punch. Boss work is a marking system that you read by touch, and is designed primarily for use with the punch deal. It is easy to put in and the items required are not too expensive. When compared to the punch, boss work is much easier to feel and more durable. The markings are almost impossible to see on the backs of the cards, and there is nothing to see on the fronts. This video will take you through putting in the work, teaching you the best way to mark the cards, and also showing... | $8 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Maintain Break With FanAllan Ackerman | $3 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Magicseen No. 20 (May 2008)Mark Leveridge & Graham Hey & Phil ShawTo subscribe to Magicseen click here. Vol. 4, No. 2, May 2008; 72 pages. Cover: Singh
| ★★★★★ $5 to wish list | |
Magician's Hold'emCameron FrancisThe craziest game of cards ever played. Effect: The magician pulls out a small packet of cards and relates a story about the strangest game of Texas Hold 'Em ever played, involving a transposition, an appearance of a Royal Flush and color changing backs. Only basic sleight of hand required. Instant Reset. 1st edition 2011; 8 pages, photo illustrated. | $10 to wish list | |
Magic Without ApparatusCamille GaultierA sleight-of-hand reference work for cards, coins, billiard balls, and thimbles. Magic without Apparatus is the first English translation of La Prestidigitation sans Appareils, which has been recognized by authorities on magic as the world's greatest treatise on legerdemain with cards, coins, billiard balls, and thimbles. The French edition elicited such comments as these:
| ★★★★★ $39.50 to wish list | |
Magic With Jumbo CardsHarry StanleyThese are effects you can do with a jumbo deck of cards preferably on stage or in a parlor setting. Many standard playing card 'moves' are possible with Jumbos, though, obviously, because of their size, the accent must be on subtlety rather than manipulation. The performer should make the most of the many opportunities for comedy, inherent in the very use of cards of such an unusual size. The very fact of asking a spectator to 'shuffle' such a pack, is funny in itself ... and, where it suits the performer’s style, no opportunity should be lost, to allow the spectators to 'mix' the cards. ... | ★★★★★ $5 to wish list |