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Jing wrote:My show varies very little between the age ranges, the odd trick or two might change, but it's the attitude that changes more. They want fun, but they are also older, so don't 'baby' them or talk down to them. You shouldn't talk down to a four year either, but with the older age range, you can give them more responsibilities in helping you out with the magic. Ask them lots of questions, that they can answer easily.
For example, for the younger group, I ask them for the colours of the rainbow, and if they struggle, I show them some colours, and they just say what they see. For the older group, I start with that, and then someone might know the order, or know the rhyme, or know the colours indigo and violet - so they feel more clever because they get to tell me something and show off their knowledge.
I don't do the colouring book for the older groups, as it's really common and they might have seen it before, but I do perform it for mixed age groups and it seems to go down fine.
My advice, is to get a change bag and some silks and create a routine yourself. Go to poundland (it's a magic shop, honest) and see what props you can come up with to make the routine more funny. Eg. fake plastic mobile phone, so midway through the routine you have to phone you mum and remind her to wash your socks, 'what do you mean you can't find them?!' etc... little later, you look in the change bag, find a dirty sock, where's the silks gone, etc etc? You get the idea, right?
mark lewis wrote:Good God! Is the colouring book well known in the UK too? All the bloody kids in Canada have seen it too! Mind you, I still do it. Here is the solution if the kids yell out (for any trick) "We've seen it before!"
Resist the temptation to bang a dove pan over the offending brat's head and simply pretend to put the prop away saying, "Oh well, you don't want to see it again, then". All the other kids and even the kid who said the dreaded words will all yell out, "But we want to see it!" Problem solved.
jomarchan wrote:I don't think you will ever regret buying a palmo. It should pretty much last a lifetime
I fell in love with it after seeing colour changing silks by Duane Laflin. Its on you tube somewhere now. I then purchased all sorts of silks from Laflin in America and practised hard to perfect things. There is a lot of religious stuff on their site which is not really me but there is also a lot of reputation making stuff on there also. Either way Dean I would really consider purchasing a few silk routines and play around with them.
Best wishes
Alfred Borden wrote:Every UK online shop is out of stock of plamo's!
Any ideas?!
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