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cards:svengali_deck [2017/08/01 09:49] – link updated denisbehr | cards:svengali_deck [2024/03/19 17:53] (current) – Added further details on the Hull and LeRoy decks. stephenminch | ||
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====== Svengali Deck ====== | ====== Svengali Deck ====== | ||
- | The short-long principle was transferred from blow books to playing cards by the 1600s; see the anonymous // | + | The short-long principle was transferred from [[paper: |
- | The next significant step in the evolution of these gaffed decks occurred the early twentieth century, with the Svengali Deck. There has been controversy over who invented the Svengali Deck, W. D. LeRoy or Burling Hull. T. A. Waters and Sam Sharpe both credit LeRoy; see Waters' | + | Card cheats used the short-long---or more precisely, narrow-wide---principle in conjunction |
- | John Booth, in // | + | In 1907, Ellsworth Lyman contributed a gimmicked improvement for displaying the deck first as all red, then as all black: The deck used shortened corners rather than jogged cards to make the faces turn all red, then all black; see "A Color Changing Trick" in // |
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+ | The next significant step in the evolution of these ideas produced the Svengali Deck, which appeared sixteen months after Lyman' | ||
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+ | John Booth, in // | ||
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+ | The first advertisements for the Hull and LeRoy decks appeared just two months apart: Hull's ran in the March 1909 issue of // | ||
According to Judge Wethered in // | According to Judge Wethered in // | ||
- | See also [[cards: | + | The Svengali Deck used twenty-six duplicate cards for its construction. Many possibilities are also available using a full deck of fifty-two cards, with half of them cut short. One such variant was published by Walter B. Gibson in // |
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+ | See also [[cards: | ||
* [[http:// | * [[http:// | ||
{{tag> | {{tag> |