Qualcuno sa come eseguire questa manovra?
Ciao a tutti!
Scrivo qui per capire se qualcuno conosca un metodo per eseguire quanto segue, sfruttando la tecnica del glide (carta corrida).
Immaginate di avere un mazzetto di 8 carte ordinato cos矛: Re di picche, Asso di picche, Re di cuori, Asso di cuori, Re di fiori, Asso di fiori, Re di quadri, Asso di quadri. La carta in fondo al mazzetto, quella visibile se mostro il pacchetto dal basso, 猫 il Re di picche.
Ora, giro il mazzetto mostrando il dorso e, usando il glide, sposto il Re di picche verso l'interno e prendo la carta successiva, l'Asso di picche, che appoggio sul tavolo facendo credere allo spettatore che sia il Re di picche. Di conseguenza, quello che mi rimane in mano, nell'ordine, 猫: Re di picche, Re di cuori, Asso di cuori, Re di fiori...
Quello che vorrei ottenere ora 猫 mostrare di nuovo il mazzetto in modo che si veda il Re di cuori, per ripetere la stessa manovra con l'Asso di cuori. Tuttavia, il Re di picche si trova davanti e non so come portarlo in cima o come liberarmene senza che si noti nulla.
Con il Re e l'Asso di fiori vorrei fare la stessa cosa, ma se riuscissi a posizionare l'Asso di cuori sul tavolo spacciandolo per il Re di cuori, avrei gi脿 tre Re riuniti.
Qualcuno sa come risolvere questo problema? Credo sia il meccanismo utilizzato per il gioco "Find the queen".
Grazie!
Hey everyone, I'm back with another one.
Here's what I came up with. You can check it out here:
The idea is you show the Kings are mixed in with the Aces.
You display a King and set it aside (using a Glide to leave an Ace).
Then you set an Ace aside on the other side (without showing it, because it's actually the King).
And so on until you're left with the last two. Since you can't use the Glide here, my thought was for those final cards to act as 'leader cards' to "attract the rest."
Italo Castillo explains it here, but with other techniques.
He rates it as advanced (you have to know the Emsley Count and the Ascanio's Spread).
I like it better than with the Glide.
Best,
In that trick, four kings transform into four aces. However, the trick Lorenzo is suggesting would be one where the four kings and four aces transpose, not transform.
Hey!
Here's a quick thought: adjust the stack to make it easier on yourself. If you stack the deck, for example, face down, from top to bottom: Ace, King, King, King, King, Ace, Ace, Ace, you can then perform a 'triple cycle' deal, a bottom deal, another 'triple cycle' deal, a bottom deal, a third 'triple cycle' deal, a bottom deal, and a final 'triple cycle' deal (which will now yield a clean double), followed by a regular top deal.
How to get to that stack and how to arrange the cards to square up the suits, I'll leave that up to your research, as I'm a bit under the weather, haha.
Cheers!
What is the triple loop?
@fr_lorenzo quick question: Does it matter if the spectator doesn't know you have the Aces interspersed with the Kings, or is it okay?
I came up with a way to do it, but it relies on showing the setup of the cards right from the start.
I might make a quick video later and upload it...
Find the Queen is explained in Varela and Tamariz's Trucky Card Magic. It's a very easy trick, relying on a gimmicked card and a glide, nothing more.
The idea I mentioned earlier has nothing to do with this; I must have misread it. This effect is about showing eight cards, making it appear as though you deal the Kings as a four-card packet onto the table, only to have the Aces on the table and the Kings in your hand. My mistake.
Hey there,
It's probably not the best idea, but the only thing I can think of is to do a double reverse cut. If you don't know what that is, let me know. Also, I'm interested in the trick and would like to perform it, but how would you continue the routine after turning the 4 Kings into 4 Aces? Because if the routine just ends there, it would feel incomplete.
Best,
I've been doing some research, and what really stands out is Miquel Roman's "Reset" trick. It's not published, but I've managed to reverse-engineer the whole thing myself, and now I've got it down perfectly. Another fantastic routine for the repertoire.
Hey there!
I'm afraid I don't know what a reverse double cut is 馃槄
For the ending of the routine, I've seen it done where when you're down to just one card in hand (even though it's actually five), you put them under the mat and quickly produce just the card you want (in my example, the final ace) or you pocket them (obviously leaving the four kings inside and producing the ace later).
That's where the patter, of course, and the story you tell come into play to justify why that final card ends up somewhere different from the others. I think the patter for the effect goes something like this: the last of the kings, or queens, stayed to stand guard at the door (the mat) to protect the other three, but even so, all four were kidnapped anyway (that's where you reveal the four aces or whatever card you chose).
If you can explain what a reverse double cut is, I'd really appreciate it! 馃檪
Thanks!
With a Pass. You bring it to the top effortlessly.
@ricardorg2283 I know this one, and it's similar, but the one I was explaining doesn't involve an Elmsley or a Wiggle Display.
@ricardorg2283 The whole point is for the spectator to be unaware of the aces until the very end, after the kings have already "vanished" :slight_smile:
Well, if the kings are going to vanish, then this might help you out:
It's not exactly what you're talking about, but I'm sharing it as an idea for the presentation. You'd just have to swap the Double Lift technique for the Glide.
Happy Magician's Day