today..i will reveal a simple magic trick that you all cam learn...this trick using card and it is very simple one..lets us begin..
1.firstly,ofcourse you must have a box of card.
2.then,to do this simple trick,you need a spectator..show the card to the person and devide the card into two.
3.ask the spectator to pick a card at the top of one of the devided card,remember to ask the spectator to memorize the taken card and at the same time you must also memorize the card at the bottom of another half of devided card.
4.let the spectator to put back the card at the top and close the card using another half.
5.next,ask the spectator to shuffle the card 3 times.
6.after that,you will find the spectator's card by flipping the card until at the card that you memorize,then the next card should be the spectator's card.
Caution:
#Do not expose the way that you see and memorize the card that you must memorize.
#Do not let the spectator shuffle the card more than 5 or 8,the trick probabilty to work will decrease.
this trick will not work 100%..sometime it perform error.
>this is not about magic,but this is about quick hand and tricky eye..
Saturday, December 4, 2010
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Coin in Glass Trick: The Outer Limits
Here's a new variation of coin in glass (kinda new method to me). It's a very similar routine with "Factory Sealed - Coin in Bottle" by Justin Miller in which I am more familiar with. The magician have called this the outer limits. I can say it's a superb innovation that he has done for this trick that made it more impromptu trick friendly.
This coin through glass trick is based on refraction principle that had made the coin inside the glass invisible. The main objective for this trick is for the hidden coin inside the glass to appear and the coin outside of the glass to disappear and when performed accordingly, can create an amazing illusion of a borrowed coin penetrating inside of a glass. The most important thing to be minded of for this trick is your angle. This trick is usually performed with a small audience of which should be inside the perimeter of your 11 to 1 o'clock angle.
But there is a bit of problem that I have found for this trick. It's the ending part of making the coin outside of the glass vanish or the way he disposes off of the coin which is very crucial part of the trick, your clean up part. You can't just drop it off on the floor or behind the table, you'll surely be busted by your spectators. For this part, you can use the techniques provided in Factory Sealed - Coin in Bottle. Justin Miller had used 5 methods for the vanish part that gives a very clean effect and leaves no trace of doubt but only amazement with your audience.
Vanish methods used are:
1. Retention clip vanish
2. Reel vanish
3. Phantom pick
4. Sleeve it
5. Back flip
Just check out the Factory Sealed video tutorial at Ellusionist for these vanish methods as this has been demonstrated one by one and step by step that you could easily do.
"Magic lives in a lawless world.. and in that world, exists the extraordinary.. the perfect visual miracle.. seen by so few, desired by so many.."
This coin through glass trick is based on refraction principle that had made the coin inside the glass invisible. The main objective for this trick is for the hidden coin inside the glass to appear and the coin outside of the glass to disappear and when performed accordingly, can create an amazing illusion of a borrowed coin penetrating inside of a glass. The most important thing to be minded of for this trick is your angle. This trick is usually performed with a small audience of which should be inside the perimeter of your 11 to 1 o'clock angle.
But there is a bit of problem that I have found for this trick. It's the ending part of making the coin outside of the glass vanish or the way he disposes off of the coin which is very crucial part of the trick, your clean up part. You can't just drop it off on the floor or behind the table, you'll surely be busted by your spectators. For this part, you can use the techniques provided in Factory Sealed - Coin in Bottle. Justin Miller had used 5 methods for the vanish part that gives a very clean effect and leaves no trace of doubt but only amazement with your audience.
Vanish methods used are:
1. Retention clip vanish
2. Reel vanish
3. Phantom pick
4. Sleeve it
5. Back flip
Just check out the Factory Sealed video tutorial at Ellusionist for these vanish methods as this has been demonstrated one by one and step by step that you could easily do.
"Magic lives in a lawless world.. and in that world, exists the extraordinary.. the perfect visual miracle.. seen by so few, desired by so many.."
Thursday, July 29, 2010
7 Basic Principles of Magic by Penn and Teller
One of the first tricks in Penn and Teller's Las Vegas show begins when Teller—the short, quiet one—strolls onstage with a lit cigarette, inhales, drops it to the floor, and stamps it out. Then he takes another cigarette from his suit pocket and lights it.
No magic there, right? But then Teller pivots so the audience can see him from the other side. He goes through the same set of motions, except this time everything is different: Much of what just transpired, the audience now perceives, was a charade, a carefully orchestrated stack of lies. He doesn't stamp out the first cigarette—he palms it, then puts it in his ear. There is no second cigarette; it's a pencil stub. The smoke from the first butt is real, but the lighter used on the pencil is actually a flashlight. Yet the illusion is executed so perfectly that every step looks real, even when you're shown that it is not.
These are the 7 Basic Principles of Magic used by Penn and Teller in this trick:
1. Palm - To hold an object in apparently empty hand.
2. Ditch - To secretly dispose of an unneeded object.
3. Steal - The opposite of ditch, to secretly obtain a needed object.
4. Load - To secretly move the needed object to where it is needed.
5. Simulation - To give the impression that something that hasn't happened has.
6. Misdirection - To lead attention away from a secret move.
7. Switch - To secretly exchange one object to another.
The trick is called Looks Simple, and the point is that even a puff on a cigarette, closely examined, can disintegrate into smoke and mirrors. "People take reality for granted," Teller says shortly before stepping onstage. "Reality seems so simple. We just open our eyes and there it is. But that doesn't mean it is simple."
For Teller (that's his full legal name), magic is more than entertainment. He wants his tricks to reveal the everyday fraud of perception so that people become aware of the tension between what is and what seems to be. Our brains don't see everything—the world is too big, too full of stimuli. So the brain takes shortcuts, constructing a picture of reality with relatively simple algorithms for what things are supposed to look like. Magicians capitalize on those rules. "Every time you perform a magic trick, you're engaging in experimental psychology," Teller says. "If the audience asks, 'How the hell did he do that?' then the experiment was successful. I've exploited the efficiencies of your mind."
No magic there, right? But then Teller pivots so the audience can see him from the other side. He goes through the same set of motions, except this time everything is different: Much of what just transpired, the audience now perceives, was a charade, a carefully orchestrated stack of lies. He doesn't stamp out the first cigarette—he palms it, then puts it in his ear. There is no second cigarette; it's a pencil stub. The smoke from the first butt is real, but the lighter used on the pencil is actually a flashlight. Yet the illusion is executed so perfectly that every step looks real, even when you're shown that it is not.
These are the 7 Basic Principles of Magic used by Penn and Teller in this trick:
1. Palm - To hold an object in apparently empty hand.
2. Ditch - To secretly dispose of an unneeded object.
3. Steal - The opposite of ditch, to secretly obtain a needed object.
4. Load - To secretly move the needed object to where it is needed.
5. Simulation - To give the impression that something that hasn't happened has.
6. Misdirection - To lead attention away from a secret move.
7. Switch - To secretly exchange one object to another.
The trick is called Looks Simple, and the point is that even a puff on a cigarette, closely examined, can disintegrate into smoke and mirrors. "People take reality for granted," Teller says shortly before stepping onstage. "Reality seems so simple. We just open our eyes and there it is. But that doesn't mean it is simple."
For Teller (that's his full legal name), magic is more than entertainment. He wants his tricks to reveal the everyday fraud of perception so that people become aware of the tension between what is and what seems to be. Our brains don't see everything—the world is too big, too full of stimuli. So the brain takes shortcuts, constructing a picture of reality with relatively simple algorithms for what things are supposed to look like. Magicians capitalize on those rules. "Every time you perform a magic trick, you're engaging in experimental psychology," Teller says. "If the audience asks, 'How the hell did he do that?' then the experiment was successful. I've exploited the efficiencies of your mind."
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Mental Magic Trick: The Mathmagic Dice Deception
Here's a cool magic trick (sort of) that you could do as an ice breaker while playing your favorite board game with your friends or family. (Just be sure you're using dice with your board game, snakes and ladders perhaps)
Effect: The magician reads the spectator's mind
Materials: Dice
Magic Secret: Whilst the magician's back is turned (or blindfolded), the spectator throws a die on the table. The spectator is then asked to remember the number thrown and then to make another throw. Tell the spectator to double the first number he threw and to add five to the answer. The spectator has now to multiply his answer by five and then add on the second number thrown. Ask the spectator to tell out loud the total number he has reached. The magician then mentally subtract 25 from the answer he gives. The magician will then end up with a two digit number - The first digit is the first number thrown and the second is the second number thrown.
The spectator is then asked to look into the magician's eyes and pretend to be reading his mind. With a little bit of concentration and a grade school math, the magician tells the spectator the numbers he trew.
Here's an example:
1st Number: 3
2nd Number: 5
1. Double the first number: 3 x 2 = 6
2. Add five to the answer: 6+5 = 11
3. Multiply answer by 5: 11 x 5 = 55
4. Add the second number: 55 + 5 = 60
6. Ask the spectator to tell out loud the total number: 60
7. Mentally subtract 25 from the total number: 60 - 25 = 35
8. Answer: 3 & 5
Just remember to always use dice and not just let the spectator think of 2 numbers as this adds more misdirection and dice deception.
Effect: The magician reads the spectator's mind
Materials: Dice
Magic Secret: Whilst the magician's back is turned (or blindfolded), the spectator throws a die on the table. The spectator is then asked to remember the number thrown and then to make another throw. Tell the spectator to double the first number he threw and to add five to the answer. The spectator has now to multiply his answer by five and then add on the second number thrown. Ask the spectator to tell out loud the total number he has reached. The magician then mentally subtract 25 from the answer he gives. The magician will then end up with a two digit number - The first digit is the first number thrown and the second is the second number thrown.
The spectator is then asked to look into the magician's eyes and pretend to be reading his mind. With a little bit of concentration and a grade school math, the magician tells the spectator the numbers he trew.
Here's an example:
1st Number: 3
2nd Number: 5
1. Double the first number: 3 x 2 = 6
2. Add five to the answer: 6+5 = 11
3. Multiply answer by 5: 11 x 5 = 55
4. Add the second number: 55 + 5 = 60
6. Ask the spectator to tell out loud the total number: 60
7. Mentally subtract 25 from the total number: 60 - 25 = 35
8. Answer: 3 & 5
Just remember to always use dice and not just let the spectator think of 2 numbers as this adds more misdirection and dice deception.
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