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The Lucky DeckDarwin OrtizEffect: You display a heirloom deck from your grandfather that due to its frequent use has lost all faces - you display a blank deck. You place the Queen of Hearts (a blank card) on the table and the Joker (another blank card) in your breast pocket. Magically these cards turn into the real cards. On top of this entire deck has changed from a blank deck to a regular deck. You will need to be able to do: a reverse fan, hindu shuffle, double lift. runtime: 10min 17s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
A Logical ConclusionLarry JenningsA trick with eight cards. Two packets of four cards are put on the table. The first packet is counted and shown to consist of four 3s. The second is counted and shown to consist of four 7s. Then the packets are combined turned face up to show the Ace of Hearts through the Eight of Hearts. So essentially the four 3s and the four 7s have transformed into the Ace through 8 of hearts. This effect can also be found in Cardwright. You will need to be able to do the Rhythm Count. runtime: 4min 47s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
The Pacoima SolutionLarry JenningsThe performer retails and reenacts a dream that at the end becomes reality. A pack of cards is introduced. Spectator gives it a cut and peaks at a card in the center of the deck. Then the spectator gives the deck a shuffle. Performer turns half of the deck face up and half stays face down. The spectator is asked to remember if her card is in the face-up or face-down portion. The performer spreads the face-up portion. Then the portions are separated and the performer continues with his dream where he took a card crumpled it up and it vanished in mid air to reappear face up in the tabled portion.... | $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
The Lie DetectorLarry JenningsAn entertaining an fairly easy to perform effect. Spectator picks a card, remembers it, and returns it. Performer claims that a pack of cards is like a computer and that he can program it to function like a lie detector. After the performer takes out some cards and reinserts them into the pack, the entire deck is handed to the spectator who answer and spells his answers by tabling cards. Was the card a face or point card? Was the card red or black? What suit was it? The bottom card of the tabled packet always shows the correct answer and therefore it is clear if the spectator told the truth... | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
A New GameMichael MaxwellThis trick was developed by Allan and Debbie Ackerman. Debbie is Allan's daughter. A spectator chooses a card and the value of the card decides how many hands are dealt in this game. Let's say the spectator chooses the 3 of Hearts. A random number of cards is taken from the deck and then dealt into 3 hands. Then the performer announces that the spectator should pick one pile. If that pile does not have a 3 on its top the spectator wins, otherwise the magician wins. Of course, the odds are vastly in favor of the spectator. Nevertheless, the top cards on all three piles turn out to be 3s and as... | $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
The Lazy Man's Interlocking Setup IIMichael MaxwellOne spectator receives a prediction for safe keeping. Another spectator receives a portion of the deck, shuffles it thoroughly, deals cards one at a time on the table, and stops whenever he likes. He may stop at the first card, the last card, or anywhere in between. The value of the randomly chosen card is used to count to a card in the remaining portion of the deck. And that card matches the prediction. runtime: 4min 34s | $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Reassembled FinaleAllan AckermanFour hands are dealt starting with an Ace for each hand. Another three cards are dealt on top of each ace. One at a time the Aces travel to the magicians hand - your standard Ace assembly. However, in a flash the aces jump back and on top of each pack is an Ace. There are no difficult moves in this routine, but it is a longer routine with several steps to remember. runtime: 8min 18s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Jacks or Better (Ortiz)Darwin OrtizA commercial gambling routine. Darwin starts with a little false dealing demonstration dealing seconds and then thirds, fourths or fifths. He continues to show how a cheat could use such dealing techniques. He attempts to deal the four Jacks to himself starting with the Jacks as the top four cards. However, he ends up dealing the four Jacks to his opponent and - as a climax - reveals that he has dealt himself the four aces. Darwin teaches an easy faux 3rd-, 4th-, 5th- deal. You will need to be able to deal seconds. You will also need to be able to cull cards and do a Braue addition. runtime: 7min 9s... | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Angel Card Rise PlusDavid BritlandDavid Britland describes a lovely gimmick which allows you to produce an eerie rising card effect. The basic concept of the gimmick is not new and it was not new in the 80s when the first edition of this booklet was published. However, the value of the ebook lies in the various ways to deploy the gimmick, the different effects one can achieve, and the methods to clean up or transition into the next routine. You will learn how to achieve a double rise effect where first the deck rises out of the case and then the selected card rises out of the deck. You also read a great anecdote how Dave... | ★★★★★ $6 to wish list | |
Remember & ForgetGary KurtzThis is an effect Hofzinser created. You can read three versions of the original in Hofzinser's Card Conjuring. Three spectators choose two cards each and are asked to remember them both. Then they are asked to forget one of their cards. All six cards are returned and lost in the deck. Then spectator by spectator the performer finds the card the spectator remembered, shows it and places it face down on the table. As a climax those three remembered cards turn into the cards the spectators tried to forget. runtime: 11min | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Tearing a Lady in TwoDavid BritlandIf you like the classic Card Warp effect you will love this related but nevertheless quite different effect. And you might have seen Charlie Fry's version of this trick - Ripped & Fryed - featured on the Paul Harris True Astonishment DVDs. Now you can learn the original and get all the tips, subtleties and pointers from the creator. Whilst you can use this effect with playing cards it works equally well with business cards. In performance you introduce the subject of the big illusions that are being performed on TV. Although you haven't brought along all your apparatus with you perhaps some young lady... | ★★★★★ $6 to wish list | |
Royal TwistLarry JenningsThis is a take on the Twisting Aces plot with a kicker climax where the four of a kind change into a Royal Flush. The four tens are taken out of the pack and displayed one by one. Repeatedly twisting the pack turns one of the tens face up. At the very end the cards change into a Royalt Flush. Intermediate difficulty. runtime: 7min 30s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Window of OpportunityPaul HarrisA signed business card vanishes and reappears inside a sealed junk mail envelope. Everybody receives junk mail and you probably have some lying around the house right now. Wouldn't it be great to do some magic with it and put it to good use? This video will teach you how. This trick is very easy to do and very clever in its method. runtime: 9min 5s | $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
New Tens RoutineDarwin Ortiz | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Double Dupe Poker DealAllan AckermanThis is an extension of the Martin Gardner poker deal from Royal Road to Card Magic including ideas from Simon Aronson and John Bannon. This effect starts out with a quick transformation. Two spectators select four cards in total. These four cards visually and instantly change to the four kings. Then Allan demonstrates how a cheat would stack a deck to achieve an advantage. The final climax is a Royal Flush dealt to himself and three kings to one of the spectators. runtime: 15min 36s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Blind AcesDarwin OrtizA deck is borrowed from one spectator and shuffled by another spectator. Darwin finds the four aces while his eyes are covered by the hands of a third spectator. He even discerns the suit of one of the aces by touch alone. To pull this effect off you will need a bit of pre-show work. runtime: 18min 28s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Three-in-OneJack Carpenter | $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
A Hard Ace To FollowMartin A. NashFeaturing Infinity Martin is demonstrating the difference between coincidence, or luck, and sleight-of-hand. This is a lovely routine where a spectator selects a card that is lost in the deck. The four aces are shown and one ace with the same suit as the spectators card magically turns face down while the aces are held by the spectator. Perhaps a coincidence. Then another card in the remaining deck turns face down. Luck?! The final climax when the two face-down cards are turned face-up is the transposition of an ace and the chosen card because the ace is found in the deck and the chosen card... | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Ten PeeksMichael SkinnerThe ace through 10 of Diamonds are inserted into the pack, each card at a different location. The deck is shuffled and then Michael produces each card one by one in different ways using pop out moves, cuts, and other flourishes. This is an improvement of an effect popularized by Eddie Fechter. However Eddie produced each card the same way using the gymnastic ace production from the Paul LePaul book. runtime: 14min 46s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Wild with the LadiesR. Paul WilsonFour Jokers turn one by one into the same card that was selected before by a spectator. For the climax the four cards turn into the four Queens. This effect was inspired by Jenning's Wild Cards. runtime: 8min 22s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Fair is FairRich MarottaA deck is shuffled by a spectator. A card is picked in a fair and open manner. The card is returned and the deck is shuffled again by the spectator. The performer takes out four cards, one of the four is the spectator chosen card. The chosen card vanishes leaving only three cards in the performer's hands. The card appears face-up in the tabled deck. runtime: 11min 58s | $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
The Invisible PalmLarry JenningsThe Ace Assembly theme is a classic one. Jennings credits Bill Miesel as the first to create a card assembly effect. Here you will learn Larry Jennings' variation which avoids bringing the deck and the aces together. The four aces are shown one at a time. Very slowly one by one and absolutely fairly three aces travel to the leader ace. runtime 9min 40s | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Homing CardSteven Youell | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
The GleanerJozsef KovacsChanging Collectors
Cheese In My Pocket 1st edition 2011; 4 pages. | $6 to wish list |