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Ebook - Dennis Loomis - Cups And Balls Routine (Digital Download)
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Ebook - Dennis Loomis - Cups And Balls Routine (Digital Download)

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Description & Effect

Dennis Loomis's 'Cups And Balls Routine' ebook offers a fascinating journey into one of magic's most iconic effects, presented through the unique lens of a seasoned professional. This digital download provides instant access to a routine honed over three decades of performance by Mr. Loomis, a magician known for his innovative methodological thinking. Students of magic, from intermediates to advanced practitioners, will find profound value in his distinct approach to Dai Vernon's classic.

A Revolutionary Method for Classic Magic

What sets Mr. Loomis's routine apart is his commitment to logical and natural handling. He masterfully eliminates the majority of traditional false transfers, instead relying on the natural actions of setting down and lifting the cups to achieve powerful vanishes and loads. This approach encourages a deeper understanding of misdirection and natural movement, offering a fresh perspective on the mechanics of the Cups and Balls. Additionally, his practical performance setup, utilizing modified plastic wastepaper buckets for props and loads while seated, provides an elegant solution for close-up and parlor settings.

Unlocking New Phases and Sleights

Beyond his core methodology, Loomis introduces captivating new elements that elevate the routine. Learn the intriguing 'three-ball dispersal' effect, where balls magically transpose back to their original individual positions after gathering under one cup. Also included is the powerful 'smash color change,' an instantaneous transformation of a single ball beneath a cup, ingeniously serving as misdirection leading into the final climax. These unique phases provide fresh moments of astonishment and a distinct identity to your performance.

Mastery Through Clear Instruction

This well-produced ebook is more than just a routine; it's a masterclass in magical theory and practical application. Mr. Loomis lucidly describes every move and nuance, ensuring that you can confidently integrate his methods into your own repertoire. Supported by clear photographs, the explanations are concise and easy to follow, allowing for efficient learning and practice. Embrace a routine that challenges conventional wisdom and offers a refined, 'logical' pathway to mastering the Cups and Balls.


Original Specs

Dennis Loomis - Cups And Balls Routine ( Instant Download )

Dennis Loomis is a professional magician from the Bay Area who has applied some different methodological approaches to what is essentially (as he quite fairly points out) the structure of Dai Vernon's classic routine for the Cups and Balls. Mr. Loomis performs the routine while seated at a table, using Don Alan's design idea of stretching saddle bags across the seat of the chair in order to hold the props and loads (however Mr. Loomis is actually using small plastic wastepaper buckets rather than cloth or can-vas bags). He has added one additional phase to the Vernon routine, a "three-ball dispersal" effect, in which after the three balls assemble under the center cup, they magically transpose back to their original positions, i.e., one beneath each up. (Such a phase has been seen else-where I first saw it in the hands of Michael Skinner but this author's handling is sound and surprising.) He has also added a "smash color change," the instantaneous color-change of a single ball beneath a cup, which occurs just before the revelation of the final loads (and serves as mis-direction during the procedure leading into that climax).

Mr. Loomis's methodological alterations are centered on his elimination of any and all false transfers. (In fact, as he points out, there is a single false transfer for purposes of construction during the preparatory actions for the final loads, but this transfer is not used for a vanish.) Thus all the steals and loads are accomplished under cover of either setting the cups down onto the table or lifting them from the table. All these moves already exist in the literature, of course, but Mr. Loomis describes them lucidly and useful-ly. His theoretical point about this fundamental alteration of the method is that such transfers are illogical: it makes more sense to simply place a cup over a ball, rather than transfer a ball from one hand to the other and place it beneath a cup with the fingers.

I cannot argue the author's logic, but the argument only gets you so far. After all, this logic really has to do with the issue of naturalness, and literal naturalness is not always what best serves the interests of good magic. When Vernon promoted naturalness in magic, he never meant literal naturalness; rather he meant trained naturalness (to use John Thompson's term) or what I have dubbed "supra-naturalness" (and which is explored in detail further in the essay, "Unnatural Acts," in my book, Shattering Illusions). Thus I do not dispute the author's claim that his approach is more logical; similarly, it may even be more natural. But as to whether it is superior for magic's purposes, that is another question.

I have no doubt that the routine is effective in Mr. Loomis's hands; he has been performing it for some 30 years or more. However, there are other benefits to the use of false transfers. Incessantly banging cups up and down is not necessarily the most elegant or aesthetically pleasing way to handle them; I like banging the cups around (Charlie Miller liked the noise of the cups and endorsed its inclusion) but I don't want to handle them solely in this potentially ham-fisted or childlike manner. There is a sense of clarity that comes from handling things precisely and at the fingertips that is part of using false transfers; a sense of fairness and deliberation, without being prissy about it. Too, there is a large price which Mr. Loomis pays for his approach: the balls never vanish from your hands. Yet such vanishes have a distinctly different more magical feel to them than simply causing a ball to disappear from beneath a cup. When a solid ball vanishes from your hand, you have clearly violated a fundamental law of physics: matter can neither be created nor destroyed. I, for one, would hate to abandon the power and poetry of this effect, an effect far more important to the routine, in my estimation, than the cup-to-cup transpositions.

This is not to suggest that those transpositions are not valuable; for me, what is most valuable about the first cup-to-cup transposition in the original Vernon routine is the opportunity it presents to involve the audience, by allowing them to choose a cup. Mr. Loomis, however, has abandoned that option, preferring to merely demonstrate the ability to magically move the balls from one cup to another. My point is not to denigrate Mr. Loomis's routine here, but merely to point out that every time you make a change, you give something up in return for adding or substituting something else. So I confess I prefer to stick with Mr. Vernon's choices at least in the areas under discussion. That said, Mr. Loomis has provided a well-produced little booklet, with clear photo-graphs and concise explanations, which may be of interest to many students of this classic routine.

Customer Reviews

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Grace Campbell

January 18, 2026
No setup? Yes please!
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Violet Bryant

January 14, 2026
So easy, yet so deceptive.
M

Madelyn Page

November 24, 2025
My favorite effect this month.