What Craig?? All were amazing-- Love them all. That Brainwave deck effect-- so good. I introduced myself to Wayne at the Ruskin a couple months ago at Blackpool. 5 minutes later Wayne got up from the table he was sitting at with some friends to come over and gift me with a new effect of his== Class act!!!!!
So the second effect has a few sources: A Futile Lesson in Open Spelling (Edward G. Brown, Paul Rosini, 1968) David Williamson "He who spelt it dealt it" was inspired by Edwards and paul. The Spelling Bee (Jack Chanin, John McArdle, John Weiss, Al Flosso, 1950. I would say This version is more closely related to what you shared in the video Craig.
I like "Lucky Number 13" as a method killer for people who know a little sleight of hand. I present it as proof that the best magic is in the cards, not the magician - you just have to learn to listen to what the deck is telling you. The procedure is then me demonstrating to them (walking them through) how to listen to the deck...
golden tricks especially the third one! Love how your videos keep introducing lots of new & old stuffs. It brings so much information and definitely helps lots of people including me! btw, visit less cafe and be healthy :)
The first trick Lennart Green published in his Northern Lights Lecture Notes as 'Numerology 13-3-1'
What Craig?? All were amazing-- Love them all. That Brainwave deck effect-- so good. I introduced myself to Wayne at the Ruskin a couple months ago at Blackpool. 5 minutes later Wayne got up from the table he was sitting at with some friends to come over and gift me with a new effect of his== Class act!!!!!
Excellent normal deck joints! Impressive that Ryland spotted such a rad card trick and fooled his Pops with it.
Great tricks I believe the first one is a take on a old Martin Gardner trick
All gold, Craig! Thank you for sharing them.
Top job Craig ... thanks for sharing
Craig - The first trick, the 13 card one is very similar to The Royal Road To Card Magic's " Ultra Card Divination "
So the second effect has a few sources:
A Futile Lesson in Open Spelling (Edward G. Brown, Paul Rosini, 1968)
David Williamson "He who spelt it dealt it" was inspired by Edwards and paul.
The Spelling Bee (Jack Chanin, John McArdle, John Weiss, Al Flosso, 1950.
I would say This version is more closely related to what you shared in the video Craig.
I like "Lucky Number 13" as a method killer for people who know a little sleight of hand. I present it as proof that the best magic is in the cards, not the magician - you just have to learn to listen to what the deck is telling you. The procedure is then me demonstrating to them (walking them through) how to listen to the deck...
golden tricks especially the third one! Love how your videos keep introducing lots of new & old stuffs. It brings so much information and definitely helps lots of people including me!
btw, visit less cafe and be healthy :)
How impressive you've lied him into his eyes: "You did shuffle and I did nothing with the cards, isn't it?" Hahaha!
What is the name of the first trick? Great!
"Triskaidekaphobia" is literally "an irrational fear of the number 13."
😃
The 1st trick goes further back than Lennart Green , even if he has published it.
Lennart , not Leonard.
Lennart Green-not Leonard!
That’ll be my fault ~ mr non magician editor man who can’t understand how craig says Lennart 🥺 Apologies
@@magic-tv Goddamn you Craig! How dare you change the T to a D !
Upon rewatching with this new found knowledge of the name Lennart, i’m pretty sure Craig says it correctly, i just have broken ears ~Michael
Lennart not leonard, probably should be changed
Is in the pinned comment and i apologised in the comments ~ Michael