Conjuring Credits

The Origins of Wonder

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misc:snap [2013/03/29 12:55] – tag added denisbehrmisc:snap [2017/06/28 16:58] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1
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 ====== Snap! ====== ====== Snap! ======
  
-In the August 1966 //[[http://askalexander.org/display/12843/Pallbearers+Review+Vol+1+2/51|Pallbearers Review]]//, p. 49, Sid Lorraine describes "Snap!", a gaffless cut-and-restored bit using scissors, a folded card and a rubber band. He explains that the trick was marketed by Max Holden, and although a year is not provided the sense is that it was in the 1930s. The same idea can be found in Tom Sellers's "A Trick for the Pocket" in Bagshawe's //Magical Monthly//, September 1926. Instead of card and rubber band, Sellers uses a piece of sewing thread running through a cigarette.+In the August 1966 //[[http://askalexander.org/display/12843/Pallbearers+Review+Vol+1+2/51|Pallbearers Review]]//, Vol. 1 No. 10, p. 49, Sid Lorraine describes "Snap!", a gaffless cut-and-restored bit using scissors, a folded card and a rubber band. He explains that the trick was marketed by Max Holden, and although a year is not providedthe sense is that it was in the 1930s. The same idea can be found in Tom Sellers's "A Trick for the Pocket" in Bagshawe's //Magical Monthly//, September 1926. Instead of card and rubber band, Sellers uses a piece of sewing thread running through a cigarette.
  
 {{tag>effect}} {{tag>effect}}