Conjuring Credits

The Origins of Wonder

User Tools

Site Tools


Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Last revisionBoth sides next revision
cards:color_change_with_rubber-banded_dec [2017/08/27 22:31] – created stephenminchcards:color_change_with_rubber-banded_deck [2017/08/28 18:01] – ↷ Page name changed from cards:color_change_with_rubber-banded_dec to cards:color_change_with_rubber-banded_deck denisbehr
Line 1: Line 1:
 ======Color Change with Rubber-Banded Deck====== ======Color Change with Rubber-Banded Deck======
  
-In //[[http://askalexander.org/display/13191/Magicians+Tricks+How+They+Are+Done/59|Magicians' Tricks: How They Are Done]]// (1910, 0. 46), Hatton and Plate describe doing color changes while the deck is bound with a rubber band. A few cards were prepared by drawing two crossed black lines on their faces, which from a distance appeared to be the rubber band that was wrapped around the deck.+In //[[http://askalexander.org/display/13191/Magicians+Tricks+How+They+Are+Done/59|Magicians' Tricks: How They Are Done]]// (1910, p. 46), Hatton and Plate describe doing color changes while the deck is bound with a rubber band. A few cards were prepared by drawing two crossed black lines on their faces, which from a distance appeared to be the rubber band that was wrapped around the deck.
  
 In the Aug. 1911 issue of //[[http://askalexander.org/display/38201/The+Sphinx/5|The Sphinx]]// (Vol. 10 No. 9, p. 109), J. Edward Stewart added more verisimilitude to the gimmick by gluing lengths of real rubber band to the face of one card. This was loaded onto the bottom of a deck bound in rubber bands. The face of the deck was displayed and the feke card palmed off to effect the color change. In the Aug. 1911 issue of //[[http://askalexander.org/display/38201/The+Sphinx/5|The Sphinx]]// (Vol. 10 No. 9, p. 109), J. Edward Stewart added more verisimilitude to the gimmick by gluing lengths of real rubber band to the face of one card. This was loaded onto the bottom of a deck bound in rubber bands. The face of the deck was displayed and the feke card palmed off to effect the color change.