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Face Up Face Down MentalismMike KempnerYou ask the spectator to blindfold you, or you turn around so that you can't see anything that the spectator is doing. You really do not see anything! You ask the spectator to create 5 piles of 10 cards each, so that 50 cards are in play. You tell her to make sure that there are 5 cards face-up and 5 cards face-down in each of those 10 piles. They can be in ANY order, and she is to do all of this ordering in ANY way she wants, without telling you (and, of course, you can't see anything that she is doing). You then let her know that you are going to separate each pile of 10 cards blindfolded... | $4 to wish list | |
Eyes of the GodsJohn HamiltonAn exceedingly clever location of two cards using the Free Cut Principle by the inventor of this beautiful principle. Effect: The performer hands a deck of cards to one of two spectators with the request that he shuffle it, and then divide it equally with a second spectator. While this is being done, the performer turns his back. Now each spectator is instructed to select a card from his respective half. Next they each exchange a number of cards so that the performer doesn't know how many cards each man holds, or which cards were selected (and he doesn't). Now the performer tells them... | $6 to wish list | |
ExplorationsPaul GordonThis ebook explores three mathematical principles of card magic. The Gordon Principle which was inspired by the Eddie Joseph/Ed Marlo Automatic Placement. STuDFuTS is an idea, inspired by Henry Christ's thinking. The Free-Cut Principle is an idea by Gene Finnell.
| ★★★★★ $10 to wish list | |
Everybody's FooledJoseph B.The method for this miracle is a miracle. So sneaky and ingenious and in many ways better than other gimmicks that have been used for this type of method. The gimmick is something that opens the door to new ideas because this technique is a very powerful weapon. The title says it all. This effect will fool anyone. Even the most experienced magicians. A revolutionary and incredibly surprising technique. You will be able to find the card the spectator cuts to in a shuffled and borrowed deck, under incredibly impossible conditions. Really easy to do, no sleight of hand.
| ★★★★★ $6 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Esoteric ACAANJoseph B. | ★★★★★ $7 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Enigmaths 9Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his ninth and last volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Many of them are card tricks.
1st edition 2011; 35 pages. Illustrated. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 8Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his eighth volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Many of them are card tricks. 1st edition 2011; 32 pages. Illustrated. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 7Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his seventh volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Many of them are card tricks. 1st edition 2011; 31 pages. Illustrated. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 6Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his sixth volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Many of them are card tricks.
1st edition 2010; 36 pages. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 5Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his fifth volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Many of them are card tricks.
1st edition 2010; 36 pages. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 4Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his fourth volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Many of them are card tricks.
1st edition 2010; 36 pages. Table of Contents
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 3Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with his third volume in this series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Most of them are card tricks. A total of twenty effects for the magician looking for subtle math to enable stunning miracles. Everything is clearly explained with drawings, diagrams and tables.
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 2Werner MillerWerner Miller continues with the second volume in his series of self-working and semi-automatic effects all based on mathematical principles. Most of them are card tricks.
| ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Enigmaths 1Werner MillerHere you will find 20 self-working effects all based on mathematical principles. Most of them are card tricks. This is the first volume in a series of ebooks. Max Maven: "I am a fan of Werner Miller." | ★★★★★ $12 to wish list | |
Encyclopedia of Self-Working Card TricksGlenn G. GravattThis is a marvelous compilation of mostly easy and sleightless, or as it is usually called self-working, card tricks. Some effects do require moves such as palming, and a good false shuffle and false cut will go a long way to make many otherwise sleightless effects much stronger. But for the most part no sleights are necessary to perform the vast majority of effects taught. From the Introduction: It is to be hoped that the reader will not have to go far in this book before he realizes and appreciates that this is not just another book, collection, or compilation of card tricks. It is expected... | ★★★★★ $39.50 to wish list | |
Emergency PredictionRaphaël CzajaThe magician can't find the spectator's card but his prediction can. In short: The spectator cuts to a card, removes it from the deck and remembers it. Then, the magician shuffles the deck and divides it into two halves. The spectator shuffles both parts, loses his selection between them, and shuffles even more. At the end, the magician runs through the deck and removes a card, but it is not the spectator's. Fortunately, the magician has an "emergency out", a message on a piece of paper inside a red envelope, in full view from the start. The spectator reads it out loud: "If I was... | $5 to wish list | |
EliminatorsUlysses Frederick Grant | ★★★★★ $5 to wish list | |
Effortless Card MagicPeter DuffieEffortless is probably just as apropriate or misleading as self-working. It doesn't mean that these tricks don't require any effort on your side. You have to read the descriptions, remember the sequence of actions and perform the act - entertain, which in my book is neither self-working nor effortless. But what these terms try to convey is that you will not need to master difficult moves or finger breaking sleights to perform these effects. And they are very good effects. Often an 'effortless' trick can be performed to greater effect because the performer can pay more attention to audience managment,... | ★★★★★ $24.95 to wish list | |
Eddie's Dumbfounders with CardsEddie JosephNo skill - no sleights - no moves
From the introduction: Now comes the question — Why bring all this in here? Merely to stress a point. ANY TRICK WILL BE CONSIDERED AN APPARENT MIRACLE WHEN THE CAUSE EVADES US. Pages and pages have been written in an attempt to define Magic. I will give it to you in FIVE words, "THE ART OF CONCEALING THE CAUSE". The better you are able to conceal the... | ★★★★★ $4 to wish list | |
Dream PokerGeorge BlakeThis is a great routine using just a regular deck of cards - totally impromptu and no sleight-of-hand; in three entertaining phases. You have in your possession a great routine by the late George Blake (written originally in Magigram magazine). George is also giving you here the patter that he used. Just perform the routine as written and the whole thing works itself. The effect needs no set-up and can be done with a borrowed deck of cards. 1st edition 2007; 14 pages. | $10 to wish list | |
Dream DealAldo ColombiniAn unbelievable routine in three phases with a regular deck of cards and totally impromptu. You have in your possession a great effect by the late George Blake. The routine, in three phases, starts by having you dealing four 'hands' of five cards each. A spectator selects a packet and thinks of a card and you reveal it. The card is placed back in the deck and again, with a different method, you reveal it. Once again, the card is replaced and revealed with a third way to conclude a very exciting routine. All three phases involve spelling. The effect needs no set-up, can be done with a borrowed deck of cards,... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | |
Double MiracleUnnamed MagicianAn impromptu, gimmick-free, borrowed deck miracle. A location and divination of a selected card under test conditions. Read on. Imagine: The magician introduces a deck of cards. The spectator can thoroughly examine it, after which they can freely shuffle it for as long as they want in any way that they want. Once they're done shuffling, the magician invites them to look through the deck (faces towards themself, backs towards the magician) and select any two cards that they like. Let's suppose they select the two black A's. They turn these face-up and leave them on the table. Next,... | $20 to wish list | |
Double ACAANBiagio Fasano & Davide Rubat RemondWith Double A.C.A.A.N. you will perform exactly the miracle the title promises: using a simple deck of 52 cards that is unmarked and not gimmicked in any way, you will find first one and then another card, both random, after generating a number in an equally unusual and random way. A special "pad" to be printed in A3+ size, made available as PDF, will be the ideal mat for performing the effect. The various boxes will be completed, first with the choice of a mystery card kept face down and then two uncovered cards, the union of whose suit and value attributes will form a new card absolutely... | $9.90 to wish list | |
DiceptionChris CongreaveShowing that your deck is mixed and ordinary, you also show a card with a prediction written on the back. The spectator chooses a card completely at random, by rolling 1, 2 or 3 dice. You deal to their number (no force). When you reveal the prediction you have not only predicted their chosen card, but also what number they rolled on the dice. You will need a blue and a red deck (or any two decks with matching faces but different backs) to make this yourself. No arts and craft, just a sharpie and a bit of writing. The dice are optional. You can use real dice, you can use a dice app on your... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish listMP4 (video) |