|
|
greerj![]() Loyal user East Tennessee 282 Posts ![]() |
I'm trying to remember a trick where performer used numbers 1 - 9, and 3 sets of colored balls. We'll use red, green and blue. Red may have been 1, 3, and 7, while blue would be 2, 4, 9 and green 5, 6, 8. Someone would throw the balls out into the audience, someone else would select the color pattern, i.e. RGB, and then a person with that colored ball would call out their number and so on until 3 three digit numbers where made. Those numbers would be added up and the solution found in a envelope. Does this sound remotely familiar to anyone?
John |
greerj![]() Loyal user East Tennessee 282 Posts ![]() |
Found it....
|
MrWizard![]() Inner circle Conjured The Illusion Of 1038 Posts ![]() |
What was this effect called?
It's An Illusion Unless I Can't Fix It Then It's A Reality.
|
murf![]() Loyal user San Antonio, TX 264 Posts ![]() |
I can't recall the generic name for this type of effect, but one version was called Ultra Mentalism, and was featured in the Stevens on-line catalog over a dozen years ago. It was based the exact same principle, but used cards with four digit numbers printed on them. The people holding the cards would call out the digits in any order. This seemed to me to be much more deceptive.
Does anyone know a name for the principle involved here? Murf |
ddyment![]() Inner circle Gibsons, BC, Canada 2554 Posts ![]() |
There are many, many versions of this basic concept. It's often called a "matrix force", though that can be confused with a "forcing matrix", which is quite another thing entirely.
The Deceptionary :: Elegant, Literate, Contemporary Mentalism ... and More :: (order "Calculated Thoughts" from Vanishing Inc.)
|
murf![]() Loyal user San Antonio, TX 264 Posts ![]() |
Matrix Force sounds pretty good to me. My professors of 50 years ago would be dismayed that I couldn't think of the word matrix....
Murf |
hcs![]() Special user Germany, Magdeburg 537 Posts ![]() |
1665 force. Sum of a colored set is always 15.
|
ddyment![]() Inner circle Gibsons, BC, Canada 2554 Posts ![]() |
Forcing 1665 is, however, but one simple example of a much more general principle (the matrix force).
The Deceptionary :: Elegant, Literate, Contemporary Mentalism ... and More :: (order "Calculated Thoughts" from Vanishing Inc.)
|
Scott Cram![]() Inner circle 2678 Posts ![]() |
Meir Yedid has a trick with large printed cards that works on the same principle' called Predict Perfect: http://mymagic.com/yedid.htm
|
ddyment![]() Inner circle Gibsons, BC, Canada 2554 Posts ![]() |
Indeed, there are dozens of such applications of this force. Likely the best known is Jack London's original "Almost Real Prediction", of which there have been many variations. And Marc Paul spent a lot of time discussing this force in his recent Penguin lecture.
The Deceptionary :: Elegant, Literate, Contemporary Mentalism ... and More :: (order "Calculated Thoughts" from Vanishing Inc.)
|
The Magic Cafe Forum Index » » Magical equations » » Help finding trick (0 Likes) |
[ Top of Page ] |
All content & postings Copyright © 2001-2025 Steve Brooks. All Rights Reserved. This page was created in 0.02 seconds requiring 5 database queries. |
The views and comments expressed on The Magic Café are not necessarily those of The Magic Café, Steve Brooks, or Steve Brooks Magic. > Privacy Statement < ![]() ![]() ![]() |