Sort by: Product Name Author | Listed | Price |
Lord of the RingsAndrew Loh
Four cards are freely selected which represent the evil rings. Performer claims that among the four cards, only one card will represent the genuine ring and the performer attempts to mix the cards randomly in order to find out which card represents... | $6.90 to wish list | |
Poker FaceMartin AdamsHave a spectator to think any playing card. Now you are able to reveal their freely thought of card in seconds. Poker Face comes with four routine ideas and the instructions for all the necessary gimmicks that you need to perform this miracle. You can turn this into a prediction effect and you'll be able to predict their freely thought of card. You can always carry it with you. Keypoints to remember:
| $22.50 to wish list | |
A Cut DeeperAldo ColombiniThis is an ebook of card effects for the magician who's looking for strong impromptu card magic. It contains twenty-five new routines with just a regular deck of cards and as mentioned before, strictly impromptu. Contributors: John Bragoli, Stephen Clark, Aldo Colombini, Tom Daugherty, Ken de Courcy, Paul Gordon, Tom Hubbard, Joe Hustler, Stewart James, Kinos, Paul Marcus, Max Maven, Peter Rees, Joe Riding, John Yeager. 1st edition 2008; 18 pages | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
A Cut Above The RestAldo Colombini35 new routines totally impromptu, with no set-ups or difficult sleight of hand used, and all the routines require just a regular deck of cards and all of them are very easy to do. Contributors: Jack Avis, Gene Castillon, Aldo Colombini, Peter Duffie, Karl Fulves, Mike Gancia, Paul Gordon, Marty Kane, Ryan Matney, Werner Miller, Reinhard Müller, Robin Robertson, Roy Walton. 1st edition 2007; 24 pages | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
Moment's Notice 2Cameron Francis
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
DeckadeDavid BritlandIt is a collection of 7 strong card effects by David Britland. You will find various effect themes from oil and water to sandwich, and from elevator to a whole lot of twisting. 1st edition 1983, original 20 pages; PDF 25 pages. Table of Contents
| $15 to wish list | |
Master of the GameDavid BritlandMaster of the Game is an amazing poker prediction which can be performed totally impromptu, with a spectator shuffled deck and with essentially no sleight-of-hand unless you consider crimping a card sleight-of-hand. Imagine the following. A spectator shuffles an ordinary deck, perhaps his own. The performer tells of a strange dream in which he and the spectator played a simple game of cards. Furthermore, the performer has set down the details of the dream on a slip of paper which is sealed inside and envelope. The envelope is placed on the table where it remains for the rest of the routine. ... | ★★★★★ $5 to wish list | |
Jacks Union: a visual sandwich card effectAndrew LohEffect: 1st edition 2010; 5 pages. | $6.90 to wish list | |
VapoRisePeter Duffie
You offer to present a magic show using seven cards. You show an Ace, Two, Three and Four plus three Jokers. The A 2 3 & 4 are the performers. The Ace, you say, is the lightest card because it has the least ink on it, whereas the Four is the heaviest. The lightest card — the Ace — is placed into the Joker packet and it instantly rises to the top. You now add the Two to the Ace and place both cards into the Joker packet — both... | $10.50 to wish listPDF & MP4 | |
Testament de Jérome Sharp: An Analytical Essay on the Card Magic in the BookRoberto GiobbiLe testament de Jérome Sharp was the third of a series of five books where Henri Decremps (1746-1826), a Frenchman who had studied law, physics and music, would expose the secrets of Italian conjuror Giuseppe Pinetti (1750-1800) as the result of a challenge. The most famous book of the series is La Magie Blanche Dévoilée (1784). Le testament de Jérome Sharp is the book that contains by far the largest section devoted to card magic. Several facts make this book of outstanding interest to the students of card magic. First, the section devoted to cards is quite large and more comprehensive than any other... | $15 to wish list | |
Easy DiaryBarry RayAs the title suggests, a simple diary trick. A spectator names any date in the year and you hand them a diary. As they look up their date in your diary you produce the very card that is written alongside their chosen date! And at the basic level, you don't even have to know what the card is! It can be a different card every time. The ebook contains several presentations, reveals, how to set this up on your iPod, mobile phone or paper diary and a chart showing the position of all the cards for 366 days. 1st edition 2010; 13 pages. | $10 to wish list | |
ReleasedCameron Francis & Liam MontierReleased is a brand new e-book of card magic that was created by professional magicians Cameron Francis and Liam Montier. If magic were wrestling, these guys would be the Legion of Doom. Between them, these two whacky chaps have had more than a staggering 12 DVDs and released numerous effects and publications. Both have been hailed for fresh thinking, commercial material, strong effects and plots and simplicity of handling, and taste in shoes. Now comes their first ever joint effort, which contains 10 brand new and sparkling routines, all designed for practical use. Included within... | ★★★★★ $15 to wish list | |
FrierCameron FrancisAn Ace assembly with an incredible twist! Effect: A card is selected by a spectator and kept face down on the table. We'll say this card is the Jack of Diamonds. The magician claims that this is a "magic card" and will be used later. He then removes the four Aces from the deck as well as 12 indifferent spot cards and proceeds to perform a super clean Ace Assembly. The magician offers to repeat the experiment under more stringent conditions. The Ace of Spades is placed in the magician's pocket. Three face up Aces are very fairly cut into the packet of face down indifferent cards. The... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
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) | |
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) | |
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) | |
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) | |
Three-in-OneJack Carpenter | $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) | |
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) | |
Routine in Major DJuan TamarizThis is classic Juan Tamariz, a longer routine with four effects. It uses the Tamariz memorized deck. In the explanation part Juan gives you the exact sequence of his memorized deck. Important to know is that there are no difficult moves. Most of the heavy lifting is done by the stack itself and some false shuffles and false cuts. Effect: Juan shows a full deck of cards and mixes face-up and face-down cards by shuffling, cutting and turning over packs. Then all the cards are assembled into a pile, the performer riffles the corners and the spectator peeks at a card. Without looking at the... | ★★★★★ $9 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
New Tens RoutineDarwin Ortiz | ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
The Count's CountStefan OlschewskiDo you have the perfect brain? Now you do! Just take out a deck of cards and a pen. Let them shuffle the cards. Then have them call out random digits and proceed to write them on the backs of the cards until you have marked about 30 or 40 cards (or even the whole deck). Fan the cards in front of you for only 5-10 seconds to remember the sequence. Hand the cards to the spectator who called out the final number. You are ready to go: At lightning speed, and blindfolded, you run through the numbers on the backs of the cards in the exact order they have been called out! Each time you are right,... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
Weight a SecondStefan OlschewskiA spectator is asked to freely cut a shuffled deck of playing cards and hide the cut-off portion in his pocket, while the magician is standing far from the table with his head turned away. The spectator puts the remaining cards back into the case and hands it to the magician. Without even looking at it, the magician weighs the card case in his hands. He is immediately able to tell the spectator the exact number of cards that are in the spectator’s pocket.
| ★★★★★ $5.99 to wish list |