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jhmagic1 wrote:Has anyone (during an ambitious card routien) ever placed a signed card on the bottom of the deck, then have it rise to the top, and then have the spectator grab the deck to check the bottom card?
reformedarsonist wrote:Of all the effects I've seen where the magicians whips out a feather and inkwell and insists the young lady writes her name on the pasteboard, 99% of the time it's ambitious card. Why not card-under-the-box? It's the same effect, but why does one need an arbitrary squiggle and the other doesn't?
jhmagic1 wrote:Has anyone (during an ambitious card routien) ever placed a signed card on the bottom of the deck, then have it rise to the top, and then have the spectator grab the deck to check the bottom card?
reformedarsonist wrote:I've also had real sweethearts who - in an effort to work around a force - end up vehemently insisting on the bottom card in a hand-to-hand spread, which is of course the card they'd have had anyway
kolm wrote:I've had smart arses wait until the very very end to yell stop in a riffle force. If I see this happen I just quickly run through the rest of the deck and say "...any time you want to..". It's never happened a second time, not unless they want me to make them look a fool again
queen of clubs wrote:kolm wrote:I've had smart arses wait until the very very end to yell stop in a riffle force. If I see this happen I just quickly run through the rest of the deck and say "...any time you want to..". It's never happened a second time, not unless they want me to make them look a fool again
There's a solution to that - either an early or a late call during the riffle force. You tilt the top of the deck into their direct eye-line and undercut at your break, offering them their card from the top of the deck.
mrgoat wrote:Why do almost all the top (pro and am) magicians get the cards signed do you guys think?
What do you guys know that they don't?
reformedarsonist wrote:It's not something that we "know" and they don't, it's a matter of opinion. But the difference between professional magicians and amateurs isn't a bit of ink on a pasteboard - that's not what separates the hobbyist from the pro.
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