Product: Ellusionist Bicycle Ghost Stripper Decks
From: Nothing Up My Sleeve
Price: Belly cut deck £8.20, Hindu cut deck £10.20.
Difficulty: Depends. 1 for a beginner, up to about a 3.5 for serious use.
There’s always something very nice about opening a pristine deck. The smooth, new feel of the cover in your hands as several decks tumble out of the Jiffy pack, breaking the first seal, the perfect, unblemished feel of the cards themselves as they glide against each other, the subtle smell of cellulose, even the decision as to whether you work them over now or leave them be. For stripper deck users, there’s the added pleasure of checking the quality of the various aspects of the gaff.
For those that don’t know, there are two types of stripper deck - belly and Hindu. Without giving anything away, a Hindu deck is “long” and a belly is “short”. Now, I’ve always used strippers made with standard red Bicycle 808 stock, so it was with trepidation that I spent this much. I justified it by saying that they’re for performance only. Sunday best cards, if you like. But, other than the famous “negative” monochrome design, what makes them so special?
For starters, the cards use thicker stock, giving them a more rigid and crisp feel. The edges on my decks are a lot rougher than a normal Bicycle stripper deck. I like this, because it adds to the precise feel against the hands you get form a new deck as you manipulate the cards, and you can certainly feel the extra thickness during a riffle shuffle.
The backs of the cards look somewhat like photographic negatives, which makes them stand out from the pack (pun intended!). Sat in the pub, getting to know the decks over a good lunch, people kept commenting on how unusual they look.
So far so good, but all this doesn’t constitute £8.20 and £10.20 a pop, so what else is special about them? Well, put these decks under ultraviolet (black) light and they fluoresce more than a Saturday Night Slapper in Ibiza. This makes them ideal for bar, club and party work where it may be too noisy to verbally drum up a crowd. Just offer a fanned deck and off you go.
The decks come wrapped in a short instruction sheet printed by Ellusionist, showing how to use the gaff. This contains the basics, as do the instructions given away with other stripper decks. Though one day someone will go a bit deeper with the information contained within these leaflets, until then the difference here is the quality of the card stock and the added fluorescent interest.
So much for these decks being Sunday best cards for performance only. I can’t stop shuffling them and I don’t care. They’re very nice to handle and my middle to bottom overhand shuffle is now perfectly hidden.
Overall:
9/10 – a lovely deck to handle with an understated design and a strong UV effect, but what a price! Mind you, strippers need much less practice than a regular deck, so they should last far longer. Active Talk Magic members also get 10% off at NUMS. Seige hasn’t asked me to say that; it's just a fact that makes the cost 10% more justifiable to your better half when CUPS strikes, and anyway it’s preferable to deal with a UK dealer rather than chance the vagaries of importing them.