stephenmagic wrote:you can use d'lites straight away! many topics on this subject already on here
Hmmm
You can USE them straight away, for sure.
But you certainly won't be able to perform much with them except waving them around wildly and hoping someone is impressed.
Learning and putting together a little routine for the D'Lites is going to take practice—in front of a mirror at least. Oh, and a little creativity and thought sprinkled in too.
30 minutes in my opinion is about right. But it's 30 minutes well spent.
Pulling them straight out the box and expecting to be able to do something impressive is sadly a little misguided.
The advice is to learn how they work, and then learn how they look to others. A mistake I've seen made is people forget that the layperson should see them as balls of light at your fingertips—not some 'ET PHONE HOME' glowing digit phenomenon.
It's far too easy to tip the gaff and look like a plonker unless you practice:
1. How to hold your hand to look natural
2. How to angle your hand to make the EFFECT look like you're holding balls of light
3. Loading and ditching the D'Lite whilst keeping the orientation of the gimmick correct... nothing worse than having your nail on the wrong way round !
4. Synchronisation: to give the effect of one light when using a pair, you need to practice so that there's continuity when passing from one hand to the other. Another horrific giveaway is seeing no light or both lights simultaneously
5. Variation: doing the same pass from hand to hand 30 times in a row may get a bit boring. Consider variation... use things around you and interact with them. Think about what the AUDIENCE is perceiving.
A video camera or mirror should be listed as 'an essential purchase' with any D'Lite buy
