Conjuring Credits

The Origins of Wonder

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cards:card_location_by_secret_counting [2014/02/15 23:55] tylerwilsoncards:card_location_by_secret_counting [2014/07/30 20:05] denisbehr
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 ====== Card Location by Secret Counting ====== ====== Card Location by Secret Counting ======
  
-This technique has been around since the early 18th century. It was described in the anonymous //Asti Manuscript//, c. 1700, p. 59 of the Pieper translation. This manuscript was translated in //Gibecière//, Vol.8 No.1, Winter 2013, p. 29-234.+This technique has been around since the early 18th century. It was described in the anonymous //[[http://askalexander.org/display/38803/Gibeci+re/60|Asti Manuscript]]//, c. 1700, p. 59 of the Pieper translation. This manuscript was translated in //Gibecière//, Vol.8 No.1, Winter 2013, p. 29-234.
  
 Stewart James, in his "Queer Quest" from //[[http://askalexander.org/display/17659/Stewart+James+In+Print+The+First+Fifty+Years/184|Stewart James in Print: The First Fifty Years]]//, 1989, p. 148, attributes the technique's resurgence to Baffles Brush and Walter Gibson. No citation is given for the Brush reference, but Gibson's improvement appears in his //Sixteen Master Card Mysteries//, 1928, p. 4. However, in //[[http://askalexander.org/display/38817/The+Magic+Wand/110|The Magic Wand]]//, Vol. 16 No. 134, June-Sep. 1927, p. 80, essentially the same method Gibson gives is given under the title "A Deceptive Card Trick" by Tom Sellers. The details of the Sellers and Gibson write-ups, while not identical, are very close, including the spectator turning up the corner of the chosen card in the spread to note it. It appears as if Gibson added only a few small refinements to the Sellers method, and failed to mention him. Stewart James, in his "Queer Quest" from //[[http://askalexander.org/display/17659/Stewart+James+In+Print+The+First+Fifty+Years/184|Stewart James in Print: The First Fifty Years]]//, 1989, p. 148, attributes the technique's resurgence to Baffles Brush and Walter Gibson. No citation is given for the Brush reference, but Gibson's improvement appears in his //Sixteen Master Card Mysteries//, 1928, p. 4. However, in //[[http://askalexander.org/display/38817/The+Magic+Wand/110|The Magic Wand]]//, Vol. 16 No. 134, June-Sep. 1927, p. 80, essentially the same method Gibson gives is given under the title "A Deceptive Card Trick" by Tom Sellers. The details of the Sellers and Gibson write-ups, while not identical, are very close, including the spectator turning up the corner of the chosen card in the spread to note it. It appears as if Gibson added only a few small refinements to the Sellers method, and failed to mention him.
  
 {{tag>principle}} {{tag>principle}}