Hi all!
I was in Brighton today and happened to stumble upon a Magic Shop!
Since when was there a magic shop in Brighton??! It appeared from nowhere
As it turns out, the shop has been there in James St for a few months - the owner also runs the tattoo parlour next door, had the extra shop space, loves magic and thought 'why not'.
I don't think I need to spell this out to Brighton-based magicians, but I will anyway...
A local bricks-and-mortar magic shop gives you the opportunity to see products first-hand, rather than just buying on blind faith that the online video at a mailorder site is fair and accurate.
A local magic shop is a great place to browse and find out about stuff you might not have heard of before.
MOST IMPORTANT:
A local bricks-and-mortar magic shop is a life-saver if you suddenly discover that you've run out of essential consumables (flash paper, mouth coils, paper tears, what-have-you). Or have lost your swami. Or have got your sponge balls mucky...
I want this new shop to do well, thrive and be a success. And my concern for its wellbeing is pure self-interest for all the reasons listed above.
So, I'd like to encourage all Brighton-based magicians to do the following:
1. Visit the shop at 80 James St
2. Buy stuff. I don't care if it's a couple of quid cheaper online. This guy's trying to get a business off the ground, and it's one that will be good for all of us.
3. Let him know what kind of thing you buy regularly.
- are you always replacing your swami? Or sponges?
At present, he seems to have stocked up on all the 'cool new tricks' from companies like Alakazam, which is fair enough, but it doesn't really set him apart from anyone else.
The more customers he gets, the more clued-up he'll become on what poeple want, and the more savvy he'll be about buying stock that moves fluidly.
I want this shop to do well.
And, if you're Brighton-based, so should you.
There's a basic website
here, but it tells you very little. Your best bet is to pay the shop a visit in person.
End of sermon...
Pete