Conjuring Credits

The Origins of Wonder

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coin:flipper_coin [2014/05/26 20:25] stephenminchcoin:flipper_coin [2017/06/28 16:57] – external edit 127.0.0.1
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 ====== Flipper Coin ====== ====== Flipper Coin ======
  
-Bob Swadling is commonly credited with the invention of the Flipper Coin. However, Dan LeFay reports the following information received during an interview he did with Eddy Taytelbaum. In the mid-1950s Eddy Taytelbaum came up with the idea of using a Folding Coin to represent two coins. Shortly after this he came up with a Coins Through Table routine, using a Folding Coin (an idea David Roth chanced to reinvent independently some years later). In 1959, this line of thinking led to his inventing the Flipper Coin andafter performing bit with ithe made and sold a few to European magiciansFlip Postma showed the gimmick to some magicians, including Bob Swadlingat a British convention in the mid-1960s, where Swadling asked for permission to make one for himself. Two years later he told Taytelbaum the gimmick had “made him small fortune.+Bob Swadling is commonly credited with the invention of the Flipper Coin. However, this gimmicked coin was originally developed by Eddy Taytelbaum in collaboration with Flip Postma. In the mid-1950sTaytelbaum experimented with the idea of using a Folding Coin to represent two coins in the context of a Coins through Table effect (an idea David Roth chanced to reinvent independently some years later). Taytelbaum's starting point was an existing idea of using a Folding Coin to appear as two coins. In 1959, he showed his Coins through Table idea to Flip Postma. Postma suggested putting the Folding Coin into a shell. Taytelbaum did not have a lathe to turn the needed shellbut Postma did. After making prototypeTaytelbaum and Postma determined the best place for an off-center cut in the Folding Coin to create a good illusion of two coins. Postma proceeded to make a small number of the gimmicked coins and sold them to magicians. One of Postma's coins was purchased by Bob Swadling at a British convention in the mid-1960sSwadling asked permission to make one for himself, and proceeded to refine the manufacture (Postma's coins were rather roughly made) and then to sell them. Swadling added magnetic feature to keep the flipper-part of the coin locked in the shell(This information is drawn from an unpublished interview with Eddy Taytelbaum by Dan LeFay.)
  
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