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Paper MoneyMark LeveridgeYou show a piece of white paper on both sides and fold it into a neat package. Instantly and visibly the paper turns into a banknote which can be unfolded, displayed on both sides, and importantly, can be immediately handed out for examination or be spent. Devised in the early 1980s, this version of instant money printing is totally practical and very magical. The fact that the printed note can be examined is a huge plus and helps to increase the effectiveness of the illusion.
1st edition 2017, PDF 2 pages. | $10 to wish list | ||
ImpactMark LeveridgeA genuinely freely selected card is signed and then the rest of the deck is returned to the card box which is placed on the palm up left hand. The chosen card is now slid under the sealed box and the right hand is slapped firmly on top of the case. With his empty right hand, the performer lifts the card box to reveal that the signed selection has vanished, the box itself being shown freely from all sides. The box is now opened and the deck slid out and spread across the table to reveal that there is one card reversed in the pack's centre - it's the signed chosen card! No palming or sleight... | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | ||
Signed Coin TranspoMark LeveridgeTwo coins are shown and can be examined if required. They can also be borrowed if preferred. One of them has a sticker bearing a spectator's initials placed on it. A handkerchief is placed over the signed coin and the plain one is positioned on top of the cloth which is folded back across it. A wave of a magic marker pen across the handkerchief, and immediately the cloth is unfolded to reveal that the signed coin is now resting on top of the handkerchief, and on the table below the cloth is the unsigned one. Simple to do, this requires one common coin gimmick.
video 8:28 | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | ||
Colour KeyMark LeveridgeFour double-blank cards are displayed. One is placed in view to one side while the other three are arranged in a column on the table. Four keys are shown, there being one each of red, blue, green and silver. A spectator selects one of the keys (let's say the green one) and it is dropped on top of the blank card just placed to one side. The other three keys are slipped into envelopes which are mixed by a spectator before being placed down next to the blank cards in the order they were mixed into. The performer makes a magical gesture over the cards and on turning them over they are seen... | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | ||
Flying CardMark LeveridgeCard to envelope. A spectator gets the chance to perform his own magic trick. He genuinely freely selects any card and a sticker with his initials on is attached to the card's face. The card is then slipped into a pay envelope which has his initials added to the flap and address side to prevent it being switched out. With a snap of his fingers, the spectator is going to attempt to make his signed card jump from the envelope and back into the deck's centre. However, after a couple of tries, nothing appears to have happened. However, on removing the card from the initialled envelope it... | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | ||
Inside JobMark LeveridgeA small envelope with a hole cut from its address side is examined. A deck of blank-faced cards is then freely displayed and one blank card is openly slid into the envelope which is left in view. From a regular deck, a spectator touches the back of any card. Let's say it is the 6C. This card is waved over the envelope and when the previously blank card is slid out it is seen to have now printed itself to match the selected 6C.
1st edition 2023, video 8:38. | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | ||
Six AppealMark LeveridgeAn envelope is shown and a single card removed from inside, but not shown. The envelope is otherwise empty. This card is a prediction and is replaced into the envelope and left in view. Six Jumbo cards are freely and openly displayed and various spectators are asked to choose any of the cards to eliminate until just one is left. Despite the fact that there is genuinely no force or selection control, the prediction card exactly matches the randomly arrived at selection. This direct effect is ideal for a close-up or parlor show.
video 7:12. | ★★★★★ $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | ||
Countdown PredictionMark LeveridgeA prediction Jumbo card is placed sight unseen in full view. A deck of cards is displayed and shuffled and a spectator freely selects a number of cards to use from the deck. These cards are eliminated one by one until only one remains. Despite the freedom of handling and choices, the selected card matches the Jumbo prediction. Very easy to do, suitable for a close-up show or a stand-up performance.
1st edition 2017, PDF 2 pages. | $10 to wish list | ||
3 Card ConMark LeveridgeThree pre-folded cards are tipped from a card box and displayed as being a QH and two blank cards. The three cards are folded to conceal their faces and arranged in a row on the table ready for the classic Find The Lady. Having mixed the positions of the three cards, the one that should be the QH is opened to reveal it is in fact one of the blanks. That’s surprise no. 1. Surprise no. 2 comes when the other two cards are unfolded to reveal they are both blanks as well! The QH has completely disappeared. Surprise no. 3 is revealed when the QH is found folded inside the card box that has been... | ★★★★★ $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | ||
ESP Match Up PlusMark LeveridgeTwo sets of five ESP cards are freely displayed, one set with red backs, the other with blue. The red set is given to the spectator who shuffles them, the magician mixing the blue set. One at a time the performer places his cards face down onto the table and each time the spectator then places one of his cards at random next to the performer's. When the pairs of cards are turned face up, all five sets are seen to have been put down in matching pairs! This is a streamlined version of my card matching routine which has extra subtleties and a cleaner handling than earlier versions.
... | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | ||
Impromptu Lie DetectorMark LeveridgeThis is a straightforward version of the classic Lie Detector routine that can be performed with any deck (even a borrowed one) and with no advance setup. A deck is shuffled by a spectator to put the cards into a genuinely random order, and the performer then extracts one card which he leaves sight unseen in view on the table. The magician then asks a spectator three questions about the tabled card, and the helper is invited to make up his answers (since he doesn't know at this stage what the tabled card actually is). Whatever answers the participant gives, the performer spells the word... | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | ||
Credit TransferMark LeveridgeTwo for the price of one here as with Credit Transfer you get a mental effect and a piece of magic together. A borrowed credit card is slipped into a small envelope. Two paperback books are shown and the pages are riffled of one of the books until a spectator calls 'stop'. The credit card in the envelope is dropped into the book to mark the place. The second book is now opened to reveal an envelope is already inside it, and the page it rests on turns out to match the page just selected in the first book. Then the credit card vanishes from the envelope in the first book and arrives inside the... | $10 to wish listMP4 (video) | ||
Comedy For The Well Groomed PerformerMark Leveridge & Graham Hey & Phil ShawMagicseen is the funniest magic magazine around. It often features articles on comedy performers and provides comedy material in the form of verbal and visual gags for its readers to use in their acts. Over the last 10 years there was quite a lot of comedy material in the pages of Magicseen, and so the folks at Magicseen decided to collect together into one eook the big articles on comedy performers who were featured over the last decade. Inside this 100 page ebook you will find collected together the articles featured on top names such as John Archer, Paul Daniels, Paul Zenon, Mel Mellers, Graham P.... | ★★★★★ $9 to wish list | ||
Magicseen No. 1 (Mar 2005)Mark Leveridge & Graham Hey & Phil ShawTo subscribe to Magicseen click here. Vol. 1, No. 1, March 2005; 72 pages. Cover: Ali Cook & Pete Firman
| ★★★★★ $5 to wish list | ||
Magicseen No. 2 (May 2005)Mark Leveridge & Graham Hey & Phil ShawTo subscribe to Magicseen click here. Vol. 1, No. 2, May 2005; 76 pages. Cover: Paul Zenon
| ★★★★★ $5 to wish list | ||
Magicseen No. 3 (Jul 2005)Mark Leveridge & Graham Hey & Phil ShawTo subscribe to Magicseen click here. Vol. 1, No. 3, July 2005; 72 pages. Cover: Marc Paul
| ★★★★★ $5 to wish list | ||
Magicseen No. 5 (Nov 2005)Mark Leveridge & Graham Hey & Phil ShawTo subscribe to Magicseen click here. Vol. 1, No. 5, November 2005; 72 pages. Cover: The Twins
| ★★★★★ $5 to wish list | ||
Magicseen No. 6 (Jan 2006)Mark Leveridge & Graham Hey & Phil ShawTo subscribe to Magicseen click here. Vol. 1, No. 6, January 2006; 72 pages Cover: Luke Jermay
| ★★★★★ $5 to wish list | ||
Magicseen No. 7 (Mar 2006)Mark Leveridge & Graham Hey & Phil ShawTo subscribe to Magicseen click here. Vol. 2, No. 1, March 2006; 76 pages. Cover: Anthony Owen
| $5 to wish list | ||
Magicseen No. 8 (May 2006)Mark Leveridge & Graham Hey & Phil ShawTo subscribe to Magicseen click here. Vol. 2, No. 2, May 2006; 72 pages. Cover: Shahid Malik
| $5 to wish list | ||
Magicseen No. 9 (Jul 2006)Mark Leveridge & Graham Hey & Phil ShawTo subscribe to Magicseen click here. Vol. 2, No. 3, July 2006; 68 pages. Cover: Graham P. Jolley
| $5 to wish list | ||
Magicseen No. 10 (Sep 2006)Mark Leveridge & Graham Hey & Phil ShawTo subscribe to Magicseen click here. Vol. 2, No. 4, September 2006; 68 pages. Cover: Paul Kieve
| $5 to wish list | ||
Magicseen No. 11 (Nov 2006)Mark Leveridge & Graham Hey & Phil ShawTo subscribe to Magicseen click here. Vol. 2, No. 5, November 2006; 68 pages. Cover: Paul Daniels
| ★★★★★ $5 to wish list | ||
Magicseen No. 12 (Jan 2007)Mark Leveridge & Graham Hey & Phil ShawTo subscribe to Magicseen click here. Vol. 2, No. 6, January 2007; 68 pages. Cover: Dynamo
| $5 to wish list |