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Twisting Version 50Peter PellikaanThis is the classic twisting effect on steroids with multiple changes and a climax that hits you between the eyes. First you show four cards that have the same face and back designs, for example four kings of diamond with black backs. When you turn one king face up, they magically all are face up. Suddenly one of them turns upside down but it has a different colored back. Then two more different backs appear. Then all revert to the original backs. The climax is that all kings change to four different aces that have each a different back and each card is shown and tabled individually. ... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Giant Size Clever AceKen de Courcy & Peter Pit & Edwin Hooper & Ian Adair & Ravelle and AndreeFour prize winning routines on the "find the ace" theme, performed with extra giant cards that you can print yourself. IN PERFORMANCE The performer shows three extra giant cards. The audience are asked to follow the movements of the Ace of Diamonds, The Ace is mixed up with the two other extra giant cards shown - the Two and Three of Clubs. The audience never are able to discover the whereabouts of the elusive Ace. The Ace transposes continuously in an incredible manner even while it is in the hands of a spectator or while it is marked by a clip. The spectator himself takes the ace in... | ★★★★★ $8 to wish list | |
QueensPeter PellikaanYou show four Queens of heart with a red back. Suddenly the backs become blue and then all four backs change again into four completely different back designs.
You will need four Queens of Heart with four different back designs. One double backer (one back matching one of the Queen's back) and one blank face card where the back matches the other back of the double backer. 1st edition 2019, length 2min 50s | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Three To ConsiderIan BaxterThis ebook continues where Ian stopped with his Five Kinks series. His tinkering with classic routines continues. Too Easy Ace Cutting sees Ian reducing sleights to an absolute minimum for this timeless favorite, adding a surprise ending. Distinctive Side Steal describes a handling for this sleight which resolves the one fundamental problem with the move, making it far easier to acquire. Brown's Wandering Card: Ian describes his own version here and includes a subtlety which significantly enhances the deceptiveness of Brown's routine. 1st edition 2019, 17 pages. | $6 to wish list | |
Scripted #27: TriumphLarry BrodahlTwo complete scripts and very simple handling for the Triumph effect, which not only fools people, but entertains them immensely. No difficult sleights, no gaffs, no problems. Many versions of Triumph are either complicated and hard to follow, or gaffed, or even a knuckle buster. Well, the author of How To Write A Script shows how he used his methodology to write 2 different scripts that explains and entertains with the Triumph effect, while technically putting it well within the reach of every magician. This ebook gives you every line, joke, piece of timing, setup and nuance of the routine. The ebook... | $12 to wish list | |
Your Deck, Your CardSenor TorinoNight club performer Tony Kardyro (Senor Torino) reveals his favorite card mysteries in this clever collection. Drawing heavily from eighteen years' experience in the night club and banquet field, Kardyro created these effects to fill modern day demands for magic, as well as professional demands of the performer. Some of the effects depend on well-known sleights that are within the capacity of any adept magician. These proven, audience-pleasing effects will prove that you're a master of mystery. Two of the ten effects, Strange, Very Strange and Two Ace Change were called out by Walter B. Gibson as being... | ★★★★★ $6 to wish list | |
3 Collected Works(Jerry) J. K. HartmanA compilation of three manuscripts Super Dupes, Odd Lifts, and Secret Subtractions.
| $10 to wish list | |
More Wild CardsPeter Pellikaan | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Five Card StunnerKen de CourcyA very easy to do routine in which a black card repeatedly flies from hand to pocket leaving spectators amazed again and again, despite the performer trying to simplify things. All can be examined. Imagine deliberately counting five cards....four of which are red with only one black. Each and every card is called and shown - without a single false move four cards are tossed to the table and the black card is seen to have vanished. It is reproduced from the pocket. Now Imagine that you can do it again and again each time eliminating one red card to make it easier for the public to follow the... | ★★★★★ $5 to wish list | |
TosherooniqueJon RacherbaumerFrom the Foreword: "Tosheroon" is an odd but memorable name. It sounds amusing and somewhat incantatory - especially for a card trick. Bob Driebeck, who dubbed it, knew that the word was Cockney slang for a half-crown, which is also the type of coin he used to perform this offbeat card trick. The basic effect is a transformation done with an impediment in place - the impediment or obstruction in this case is a coin, which is placed onto the face of the card that eventually changes. Effect: A card is selected and lost in the deck. Then a borrowed coin is marked and placed onto the face... | ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
25 Methods For Switching DecksFloyd D. BrownEvery magician, at one time or another, needs a sure-fire method of switching decks. With this clever publication, you get 25 of them. Newly revised and updated, this must-have reference not only includes the mechanics of the switches themselves, but also offers a behind-the-scenes peek of how performers work their magic with cards. Included is the full handling of Herbert Brooks' sensational card-from-pocket mystery, just as he performed it for years on the vaudeville stage. Some of the methods involve no apparatus, others rely on props owned by most magicians. Paul Fleming wrote: Lovers of card... | ★★★★★ $8 to wish list | |
Ghost CardsBrick TilleyDisplay four cards printed on both sides and the cards go blank on both sides. The effect is reversed and you end up with four printed cards again. The instructions take you through step by step, which is easy to follow including illustrations. No difficult sleight-of-hand.
You will need a blank face and four blank back cards. 1st edition 2019, 4 pages. | $10 to wish list | |
Flat Out: cards through newspaperBrick TilleyA matrix effect using playing cards instead of coins. A simplified and better version of Albert Goshman's classic cards through the newspaper (Genii vol. 30, June 1966).
1st edition 2019, 4 pages + videos. | ★★★★★ $10 to wish listPDF & MP4 | |
Fingerprint DossierJon RacherbaumerFrom the Preface: I must confess that my initial reaction to the Fingerprint Trick was tepid. There was no tension or conflict and it came off as being a glorified location trick. But one aspect interested me. It violated one of magic's cardinal rules - namely, never tell an audience what you are going to do before you do it. And, worse, in this case the performer divulges how he plans do it. Every presentation explains how the trick ostensibly works: The selection is found by detecting the thumbprint left on it. This is a plausible explanation, but as the trick unfolds, this casual explanation... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
Think A CardJohn Scarne & Dr. Jacob DaleyFrom noted card man and gaming expert John Scarne comes this clean-cut triple prediction miracle effect that will build a reputation for you. No difficult sleights. Simple, sure and direct. The publisher had been after Scarne for years to release this clever item, before he finally agreed. Any deck of cards is shuffled by anyone and spread out on the table face up. Two spectators and the performer each merely think of a card and you write a prediction on small slips of paper for each card thought of. The thought-of cards are pushed out of the pack and the predictions are placed on top of... | ★★★★★ $4 to wish list | |
Immaculate PredictionAbhinav Bothra21st century playing card prediction that doesn't use playing cards, but you will need a cell phone. The performer caught without props picks up a piece of paper and writes his prediction. The prediction is given to an audience member to keep secure. The performer explains that he is prepared for moments like these. He further explains - A few weeks ago I shuffled up a deck of cards, once done I dropped them one by one a table and asked a friend to film it. Let me show you... He then plays a video and demonstrates how the video can be paused and played. Next, the video gets played once... | $9.95 to wish listPDF & MP4 | |
Vanishing Card BoxAlexander de Cova | ★★★★★ $12 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
WhispersJon RacherbaumerThis treatise is a detailed exploration of a glorified location-divination, framed by a whimsical conceit - namely that an inanimate object - a playing card - is the supposed agency that makes the entire trick work. In this regard it was an effort to upgrade an essentially puerile divination effect. Here is the basic approach or plot: The way the performer learns the identity of a freely selected card is apparently due to enlisting the assistance of another playing card (usually a Queen), which whispers the name of the selection to the magician. The magician then acts as the Queen's proxy... | ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
The Dirty DealerJules Lenier & B. W. McCarronAn entertaining close-up effect where you attempt to teach the spectator how to "dirty deal", but always goes wrong when the spectator tries. It gets funnier and funnier, ending with a surprise climax. Audiences enjoy tricks with a gambling theme. If the effect also combines comedy and mystery, then you have a triple threat combination that's sure to be remembered. The performer explains how he sent away for a mail order course in dealing cards. He offers to teach a spectator how to do it, offering a money-back guarantee. The spectator can't seem to follow directions, even though the performer... | $6 to wish list | |
Berland's Blue Ribbon Card TricksSamuel BerlandTwenty-five complete card miracles and moves with over 100 illustrations. Top performers including Bob Hummer, Dai Vernon, Arthur Buckley, Dr. Harlan Tarbell and others reveal their favorite card effects here for the first time. Here are new effects, for close-up, parlor and stage presentation. Ready-to-work effects, sleights, color changes, revelations and clever routines that you will be proud to perform. One hundred pen-and-ink illustrations by master artist Thomas Libonati make everything clear. CONTENTS
| $10 to wish list | |
The Expert BundleMichael Kociolek | ★★★★★ $18 to wish list | |
The ExpertMichael KociolekThe spectator names any number of hands, any rank of poker hand he wants, and which player should get the named hand. The performer states that he will deal the best hand of the chosen rank, and he fulfills the spectator's request. Everything from a genuinely shuffled deck. No palms, no magnets. Just good old, gluten-free card sharping. This is one of many effects that can be performed after reading The Expert. This 64-page ebook covers the history of the Any Poker Hand Called For plot, Michal's modified version of the stack, and how to quickly and invisibly set it up from a shuffled deck.... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
Cheat! The SequelBob FarmerStill No Skill? Still Absolutely No Problem! "This one is really, really good." - Mike K. Seldom does a card trick leave your audience groveling at your feet, women throwing themselves at you and the IRS auditing your tax returns. Sure, parting the Red Sea may be more impressive, but after your hands, in a dazzling digital jitterbug, cut five packets to reveal four Aces and a Queen - and then top that by immediately reassembling the deck and cutting another five packets to reveal a Royal Flush - well, even Moses would have to acknowledge, that's pretty damn slammin'. And that's just... | ★★★★★ $15 to wish list | |
Super SpellKen de CourcyInstantly find any card called for by spelling out its name. No sleight of hand requested. No force. This is Ken's version of "Magic Spell" by Hen Fetsch. Although it looks incredible, with a simple preparation of the deck you will be able to immediately find any card named by someone in the audience simply by spelling it. You will be able to do this with different spectators one after the other. Yes you can take out the pack of cards and spell any of the 52 cards...and, yes, the Joker too. In the complete instructions by Ken de Courcy you will find in detail how to do the simple preparation... | $6 to wish list |