nachom wrote:ah yeah, not at all interested to be honest. Card and coins are where it's at.
also, my friend told me a card vanish where you slide your hand forward and rub the card in a motion so that the one immediately behind it comes over it.
does this simple vanish have a name? I think my technique is wrong because despite lots of practice it seems to have a sloppy appearance
Please define, 'lots of practice'
I don't really care how long you have been practicing because you could be practicing 22 hours a day but if you are practicing wrong then you are just practicing your mistakes. (and the reality is you will be 'practicing' the rest of your life provided you stick with it).
So what I care about is the quality of your practicing. Have you learned the basic mechanics of the sleight? And are you sure you understand the mechanics. Let us assume yes. Can you yet put those mechanics into practice? If no, then you simply have to sit down and go through it all step by painful step. If yes and it just seems sloppy then you really have to go back and take a look at the mechanics again, you also have to study your flow and your timing.
Are you just practicing over and over again? Stopping and starting all the time. If so then stop because you are probably practicing your mistakes.
Build a little routine around it that way you get a sense of timing, of misdirection. A move take on a whole new life when you put it into the context of an effect. Also with a routine and a little bit of patter you will have a definte beginning and end so you can go all the way through without stopping. Just pushing through the mistakes, because in front of an audience you have one shot. just one.
Are you speeding through the move or moving at a nice relaxed pace. Don't run. Erdenase change is not a move of speed, (very few moves are) it is about finess and flow.
And laslty are you zipping through moves? ie learning one then running to another, then back to the first, then on to another? It is pretty much the mistake many make. Learn an effect and keep with it till it is done. Learn the moves that are required to acheive that effect. Then once you are happy and you have started performing that effect in front of a lay audience. Choose another.
If you find that slow and boring. Then you have a whole other problem.