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cards:oil_and_water [2015/09/03 00:12] – added Professeur Magicus to Passez Muscade citation. stephenminch | cards:oil_and_water [2023/08/17 11:08] (current) – moved Oil & Queens to this article denisbehr | ||
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In 1940, Walter B. Gibson published a one-phase color separation effect with a six-card packet: "Like Seeks Like" in // | In 1940, Walter B. Gibson published a one-phase color separation effect with a six-card packet: "Like Seeks Like" in // | ||
- | An unusual red and black separation effect, "Les Seize Rouges et les Seize Noires", | + | An unusual red and black separation effect, "Les Seize Rouges et les Seize Noires", |
- | It has been pointed out that Samuel Pavloff contributed a Four Ace effect, " | + | It has been pointed out that Samuel Pavloff contributed a Four Ace effect, " |
===== Anti Oil and Water ===== | ===== Anti Oil and Water ===== | ||
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In 1928, Leslie Guest proposed the effect of causing the cards in two banks—one red, one black—to alternate magically. In his column in // | In 1928, Leslie Guest proposed the effect of causing the cards in two banks—one red, one black—to alternate magically. In his column in // | ||
- | ===== The Oil & Water Effect | + | ===== The Oil & Water Effect |
- | In // | + | In // |
Shortly thereafter, Karl Fulves published another " | Shortly thereafter, Karl Fulves published another " | ||
- | ===== All One Color Climax | + | ===== Face-up Face-down Oil and Water ===== |
- | Karl Fulves was the first to publish the idea of climaxing an Oil and Water routine by having all the cards change to the same color. See “Camouflage” | + | In the same Marlo article |
- | Fulves' | + | ===== Transformation Climax ===== |
+ | ==== All One Color Climax ==== | ||
+ | |||
+ | Howard P. Lyons is the first to publish the idea of climaxing an Oil and Water routine by having all the cards change to the same color. Lyons considered the effect an inside joke to show only to other magicians. See "Clown Version" | ||
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+ | Sixteen years later, Karl Fulves reinvented the idea as a serious effect; see “Camouflage” in his //Packet Switches (Part Two),// 1973, p. 98. | ||
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+ | ==== Oil and Queens ==== | ||
+ | |||
+ | This surprise variant of Oil and Water, in which the four cards of one color change to four Queens as a climax, was originated by Roy Walton and originally published in his // | ||
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