Conjuring Credits

The Origins of Wonder

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cards:cannibal_cards [2014/02/14 22:37] tylerwilsoncards:cannibal_cards [2017/08/01 09:54] (current) – link updated denisbehr
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 Ed Marlo claims that the basis of the non-gaffed Cannibal Card vanishes owe much to Jack Vosburgh's marketed trick, "Aces," 1950. See Marlo's "Vanishing Aces" in //[[http://askalexander.org/display/24812/New+Tops/64|New Tops]]//, Vol. 4 No. 2, Feb. 1964, p. 16 (Marlo dated his trick back to May 1953). Vosburgh used a double-backed card, whereas Marlo's handling used two face-to-face cards as an impromptu version of the gaff. Vosburgh's trick predates "The Apex Ace: Ose's Addition" from Harry Lorayne's //Close-up Card Magic//, 1962, p. 91. Ed Marlo claims that the basis of the non-gaffed Cannibal Card vanishes owe much to Jack Vosburgh's marketed trick, "Aces," 1950. See Marlo's "Vanishing Aces" in //[[http://askalexander.org/display/24812/New+Tops/64|New Tops]]//, Vol. 4 No. 2, Feb. 1964, p. 16 (Marlo dated his trick back to May 1953). Vosburgh used a double-backed card, whereas Marlo's handling used two face-to-face cards as an impromptu version of the gaff. Vosburgh's trick predates "The Apex Ace: Ose's Addition" from Harry Lorayne's //Close-up Card Magic//, 1962, p. 91.
  
-  * [[http://www.conjuringarchive.com/show.php?cat=753|Category in Denis Behr's "Conjuring Archive"]]+  * [[http://www.conjuringarchive.com/list/category/753|Category in Denis Behr's "Conjuring Archive"]]
  
 {{tag>effect}} {{tag>effect}}