by nickj » Feb 18th, '05, 09:47
Interestingly, in Vernon's Inner Card Trilogy the count is refered to as Elmsley's 'counting four as four' and is done at the finger tips in the way most people seem to do it today. This must have been fairly early on in the developement of the count I would think and is probably why so many people seem only to have seen the finger tip version, certainly ICT does not allude to it having been done in any other manner and seems to take it as read that most of the readers will already know it and perform it at the finger tips and it is just being explained for the few who don't.
I had never seen (and still haven't) any description of it deep in the hands when I learned it, but I felt that it wasn't quite right at the finger tips, it didn't fit the way I handled cards so developed my own version deep in the hands. It seems that lot's of people have taken this route since there are so many slightly different ways that people do it in the hands. Could someone who knows describe to me in PM Elmsley's original deep handling of the count?
Thanks
As regard practicing sleights I tend to take the opposite route to Charles Calthrop, if a routine I am learning contains a sleight I don't know I will drop the routine and learn the sleight in isolation until I have it to performance standard and have developed the appropriate muscle memory. That way when I come back to the trick I don't even have to think about the sleight, it just happens and I can concentrate on the performance of the routine. I have also had periods of learning sleights just for the sake of it, which may not be the best way to get the best effects into your routine as you tend to look for tricks to fit the slieght rather than methods of achieving the effect, however it does seem to make it easier to learn new stuff when you have to if you are already in the habit of learning.
I'll sign off there since I seem to have digressed to a completely different subject!
Nick
Cogito, ergo sum.
Cogito sumere potum alterum.