Sometime soon I'll stop messing around with my camera and do some work.
I think this trick is really... nice. It's simple to follow and it has this strange enchanting quality as people watch with fascination at how fairly each piece of yarn is accounted for - in retrospect, the climax is obvious but is always met with great surprise.
It's a lovely little table piece because it can be enjoyed by children and adults, you can give away a souvenir at the end that itself is explanatory of the effect... you end clean... so many little things make this a winsome trick.
Couple of things:
1) Those who know or can work out the method will see a flash at a certain point. I hope you agree it wasn't worth a total reshoot for (as I've said before, I don't like to do that if possible) and in any situation other than before the unblinking eye of the camera, there is absolutely no attention being paid to the area in question at that stage.
2) The patter is half true, half rubbish. It is a Fernando Keops trick, but he didn't teach it to me personally, it's on a DVD of his! It's actually called "Mini 20th Century", although it's true that his accent causes him to call it "jellow jarn". As for him being a great magician, I've no idea, but it sounds good and he's obviously deemed worth enough for L&L to give him a DVD series. This is one trick which I think fits with this type of semi-storyline, "passed on from an old master" style presentation.
Fire away
