by Mr_Grue » Feb 23rd, '07, 13:28
I can totally relate to this thread. I've returned to magic after more years away from it than I care to say, and as luck would have it, my return coincided with a period of flat-out brassic brokenness. This has pretty much forced me down the classic e-book route (yay lybrary!), and the decision that if I'm going to be buying any props, then I'm going to be buying utility devices, rather than the one-trick ponies. I may have more gaff decks than I really ought to, but again these tend towards utility.
Last night I did some magic muckery with some friends, but couldn't get my RaMa deck to perform at all well. This was because one of my friends somehow managed to riffle shuffle it properly(!). The trick that held the best reaction, though, involved a regular deck, a pass, a palm, and the appearance of a selected card in my glasses while the riffler had her eyes closed (concentrating on her card, you understand (and, no, I didn't say "now close your eyes")). The second best reaction was a very cheeky cut to four aces. This is not only an encouragement to my slow and sausage-fingered education in card-handling, but also financially reassuring.
Simon Scott
If the spectator doesn't engage in the effect,
then the only thing left is the method.
tiny.cc/Grue