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upnxrawk New user 98 Posts |
Can do an easy deck switch if you just have a routine in-between using a regular deck then need a sharpie for another routine then go back and retrieve the other deck it's already forgotten.
Billy
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rtzoltic72 New user 2 Posts |
I started using the Jay Sankey X idea a few years ago, and that is a great improvement to eliminate the sleight of hand possibility. It also gives the spectator something extra to think about. Although someone asking to see the deck was already very rare, the X seems to have eliminated that.
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Fila New user 57 Posts |
What about Thom Peterson - Pit boss ?!
Invisible deck with the one a head 🙏👌 |
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KarpeNoktem New user 59 Posts |
Show the card reversed and ask them to take it out but don't look at it.
Put the deck in your pocket There's only one card that was reversed - yours The deck is out of sight before the reveal Just a thought although I've never really had this problem come up personally! Perhaps work on HOW it's presented - what's the process/the faux explanation/the pacing and leading of the effect This will help IMHO |
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MeetMagicMike Inner circle Gainesville Fl 3501 Posts |
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Show the card reversed and ask them to take it out but don't look at it. When you show the reversed card in the deck cut the deck at that point as you place the card on the table. Because you cut the deck the deck in your hands now has a back and a front as it should. Put the deck back in the box making sure the spectators see the back as you do. Don't pocket the deck yet. Have the spec turn over the card and as the audience reacts pick up the card and place it in the box. The card will go back to back with the card that is showing as a back in the box. You are reset. |
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MeetMagicMike Inner circle Gainesville Fl 3501 Posts |
I higly recomend the Roughing Stick by Harry Robson
I have poor vision so I buy jumbo index regular-sized decks and in about two minutes I can make my own invisible deck. By only roughing the middle of the cards, the deck can be handled naturally but when you want to separate the cards you just move your fingers down to the lower part of the cards. This solves the problem of not having enough friction on your fingers which tends to happen as we get older. |
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Avocat Elite user 446 Posts |
I used to do a single-deck christened reverse (the “Fred” trick)
The Invisible Deck could be handled similarly. Openly spread the cards and invite a strictly mental choice. Close the spread, ask for the selection, maybe have the spec imagine reversing it, then immediately re-spread to show a single reversed card You’d just need to “flop” the deck. The late Daryl Martinez had a great way to do this “move” without making it a “move.” Basically, from mechanic’s grip, you move your hand “around the deck” so your hand’s palm down while the deck effectively remains motionless in space. Then casually flip your hand and re-spread. Haven’t tested this yet, I just thought of it now. But if you’ve seen my earlier posts on this subject, you’d know I’m obsessed with IMMEDIATELY showing the reversed card to eliminate ANY suspicion of fiddling/flipping/sleights |
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Avocat Elite user 446 Posts |
Forgot - I also used a mini invisible Deck with a full size QH / AS flap card glued to it.
I ask for any card and produce the AS, turn it into the QH (the second most popular choice), then push it through my fist to turn it into a mini deck The patter should be fairly obvious |
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Brent McLeod Inner circle 1792 Posts |
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On Jan 16, 2015, J-L Sparrow wrote: Agree, I have been using this method for many years and can concentrate on the fun and audience interaction of the routine, all Im looking for is the card created by the audience in a tossed out deck style, which side of the deck odd or even, as I look for the card plays very strong.. |
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RobertApodaca Regular user Henderson, NV 150 Posts |
My cleanup is to already put the deck away before even revealing the card.
Show one card face down, take it out, put deck away, spectator names card again, reveal named card. |
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FlorianHeller Regular user Bonn, Germany 200 Posts |
@Hugh, sorry, but I'm chuckling a bit at the "I've been doing magic for quite a while" at 16, and getting busted on an invisible deck Doing it for friends in school, sure, some might grab stuff, because it's school, not a show, or adults during a strolling performance. But then maybe it's not the right trick for that audience...
As for the people who say "It's not awesome enough for me to carry an extra deck.", I'll respectfully disagree and say that the presentation and story of an effect is what will make it awesome enough. I use it as a closer for my restaurant sets personally, with a few twists that make it not like a usual "invisible deck" presentation, which I used to do at first. My version is with a torn corner (Colin McLeod does it like that as well, see his thread on it) and a signed card, that I give away to the spectator who participated. The whole premise is a story I tell them, and that I have them then reenact. The card is then found upside down, with a corner missing, and signed on its face. What allows me to replace cards as easily is using a R&S method that only needs treating one card, in my case the back of the face up cards for both decks. Then after closing the set I just go and reload a normal card already signed, that I then tear a corner of on the spot. I would love to find the corner at the end of the effect as a kicker (done that on stage with the normal invisible deck presentation, it adds a nice touch as the corner was torn off and thrown in the audience), but haven't found a way to produce said corner from an index that I'm happy with yet. Maybe one day Oh and why "do maths" and count to 13, when you can put your ID in mnemonica stack Looks shuffled and clean, not like only having 2 suits visible, you get to practice your stack while doing the ID, and as a bonus you know EXACTLY where the upside down card is in the spread, so no need to look for it as you spread! |
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dacsus65 New user Massachusetts 16 Posts |
I usually make sure they are "picking up" their invisible cards, stressing that deck is a souvenir and not sold locally ("I have to go to a shop in New York City just to get them" or similar), and whe everyone is focused on that I put the deck away then move on to the next trick or table. Out of sight, out of mind.
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