Prepare to be amazed! Uncover the secrets within Peter Duffie’s “Card Secrets Unlocked.” PDF reveals mind-bending card magic for all skill levels. Learn now!
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Unlock the Secrets of Card Magic with Peter Duffie
Dive into the world of card magic with Peter Duffie – Card Secrets Unlocked, a comprehensive guide that reveals some of the most intriguing and mystifying card tricks ever devised. Whether you’re a seasoned magician or a curious beginner, this PDF is your gateway to mastering the art of illusion.
Featured Tricks
- Crystal Clear Transpo: Master the classic transposition trick using just two cards and a glass—no duplicates needed.
- A Royal Enigma: Inspired by legends like Vernon, Kane, and Walton, this trick will baffle and amaze.
- Mexican Expansion: A predictive trick that leaves your audience questioning reality.
- On A Roll: A spectator’s card becomes part of a magical trio of Jacks.
- Mucky Hands: Witness the impossible as blank cards transpose with Kings in your wallet.
- A ‘Lessen’ in Dishonesty: A spectator’s hidden card is revealed through an ingenious method.
- Only A Game: Transform the mundane Down Under deal into an engaging audience experience.
Why Choose This Guide?
Peter Duffie’s Card Secrets Unlocked is not just a collection of tricks; it’s a journey into the history and evolution of card magic. With detailed explanations, this PDF ensures that you not only perform the tricks but understand the principles behind them.
Enhance your performances, captivate your audience, and leave them in awe with tricks that have stood the test of time. Card Secrets Unlocked is your essential toolkit for becoming a master of card magic.
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CRYSTAL CLEAR TRANSPO: The classic transposition between two cards placed on the top and bottom of a glass. No duplicate cards are used.
A ROYAL ENIGMA: Based on “The Vernon Card Puzzle” in Early Vernon (1962). It was inspired by Peter Kane’s “Royal Families” in A Further Card Session (1975) and by Roy Walton’s “Split Up” in The Complete Walton Vol. 2 (1986).
MORE ROYAL ENIGMATICS: Can be used as a Follow-up routine to the previous effect, or a stand-alone trick. Based on Roy’s “Happy Families” in Some Late Extra Card Tricks (1975), also in The Complete Walton Vol.1 (1981).
MEXICAN EXPANSION: You lay three cards in a face down row on the table. These are a prediction. A card is now freely chosen from the deck – no force. The three cards are now turned over: the first card is a SPOT card – the second card is a Diamond – the third card is a Nine. Therefore, you say, the card chosen must be the Nine of Diamonds? It is.
LEAD-IN: ‘The Spectator Cuts The Aces’ has always been a favourite of mine. This version is designed as a lead-in for any four Ace trick that requires the usual 12 cards, and there must be hundreds that fall into that category This particular version is based on a Marlo method which used the lap. No lapping here!
ON A ROLL: After selecting a card, a spectator cuts the deck into three piles. The top cards of these piles are shown to be three Jacks! Where is the missing Jack…it’s his selection, of course.
A GREAT DEAL OF THOUGHT: Two selections = one discovery and one surprise.
A SHADE INEXPLICABLE: You lay out 8 business cards numbered 1 through 8 on the table. A spectator slides out any five cards – no force. You have predicted the outcome!
MUCKY HANDS: A pseudo-explanation of hand mucking in which 4 completely blank cards transpose with 4 Kings that are in your wallet.
AS EASY AS A,B,C: A spectator shuffles the deck and cuts it into three piles, then he shuffles each pile. He now picks up one of the piles and holds it in his hands. You and another spectator each take one of the remaining piles. You both input data, and that is, the complete alphabet, A to Z! Both piles now reveal the number of red and black cards that are in the original spectator’s pile.
SHORT SHARP SHOCK SHARPENED: This short, simple but effective colour changing pack is an improved handling of that which I published in Contemporary Card Magic (Martin Breese, 1984). The original version had an awkward discrepancy where the last card dealt during the 1st selection process immediately appeared as the face card of the deck for the 2nd selection process. It has only taken me 21 years to eliminate this problem! Sometimes the simplest solutions are the hardest to find.
A ‘LESSEN’ IN DISHONESTY: A spectator takes a portion of the deck, cuts it and places a card, unseen, into his pocket. He now eliminates all but two cards. The remaining two cards are used to designate a SUIT and VALUE. These two components accurately reveal the card in the spectator’s pocket.
U. D. ASSOCIATES: A spectator finds two matching mates without knowing how.
ONLY A GAME: Tricks with the Down Under deal are generally considered boring by the magical populous. I cannot disagree with this where a large number of cards are involved, or the performer repeats the procedure four times to arrive at the four aces. Let’s face it, the Down Under has to be the least interesting thing imaginable for any audience to sit and watch. However if the number of cards is few, and two spectators are asked to partake in a little game of chance, with the performer simply standing by we may have a trick with audience interest.
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