Craigs post kind of proves my point. We are not performing 40 years ago nor are we performing (in the main) for other magicians. Using a chrome tip is the kind of smart @rseness that magicians seem to relish in so they can act smug if it fools their fellow magician. It is not the same as performing for the general public.
This nonsense seems to be quoted in almost every tt thread on here. So and so said it or someone read it somewhere. The damn thing is OUTDATED, and should be consigned to the same rubbish bin as the ''point to the hand that supposedly contains the coin'' cr@p.
Granted, there are certain effects where the gimmick isnt seen, but this is far from the rule. Magicians should be asking themselves WHY they are using the gimmick in the first place.
Lets take the classic b**l sw**ch as an example. We take out (or borrow) a £20 note, fold it up an when we open it again its transformed into a £5. Now what do you think your audience think has happened ? Any intellegent spectator is unlikely to think you REALLY turned their 20 into a 5, so they will look for a more mundane explanation. The most logical thing they will think of is a switch. They may not know how you actually did it but they will assume you must have, to them it is the only way it could have worked. The worst thing about this is that the explaination they will likely come up with is actually correct. So it stands to reason that we should be doing everything we can in our delivery and technique to make the idea of a simple switch seem impossible. Being able to show our hands empty (or flash, im not advocating prolonged exposure of the tip), especially both at the same time, can go a long way in making a switch seem impossible (as does keeping the bill always in view, but that is for a different thread).
The effect can be done without a tip, in fact its alot easier - It is very simple to hide a bill folded into eighths or sixteenths. If someone has gone to the extra trouble to learn a tt version and doesnt flash AT ALL then their time has been wasted. The ONLY advantage to using the tip in this effect is that you CAN flash.
Id be interested to hear from those who use the tt version of this effect and dont flash, as to why they are actually using the gimmick, as opposed to a tipless version.
While ive used the above effect as an example what im trying to say is not limited to this effect alone.
I realise i seem to be harping on about this and that some may see it as trivial. It really annoys me when this ''with proper technique the tip is never seen'' nonsense is quoted as gospel - it is not. Guys like Ammar, Copperfield, Klause, Sankey and Greg Wilson - magicians at the top of their game - have all realised the absurdity of carrying on with this ''rule'', and have came up with extremely deceptive handlings which rely, in part, on the tip being seen. Others would do well to do the same.
Years ago the rule was valid, but times have changed. We are not performing in 1965 any more.
jim