Anyone else is here after watching the excellent Apple TV documentary about Steve Martin? He performs this trick towards the end. He also shows the entire inside card midway through the trick, twice, which adds a lot to it I think. I just love Steve Martin.
@@RichieAustinMagician This trick is everything I love about magic, everything a good magic trick should be imho: completely baffling when you see it, and an amazingly simple explanation on how you do it, with no extra gimmick at all. Whoever invented this one is a genius.
Thank you for posting this fantastic illusion ,took minutes to prepare & gets great reactions! Subscribed immediately & sincerely hope others do likewise -you deserve a massive fan base, please upload more material -all the very best,Dave ♦️🃏
There is a discrepancy in the performing. When folding the cards, make sure the front side of the outer card (the Queen) stays in vision. After folding, the outer card becomes the inner and everthing is copacetic. One sees the front of the now inner card. Then slide trought to show the warp.
Great trick but you need to sacrifice two cards per trick...I wonder if there could be a better finishing instead of tearing the cards up... Can't think of an obvious one right now...thank you for sharing the method...
2:30. The two middle cards do not match up with their tear marks. I have not gone past this video at this point, but I can assume that both the blue and red middle cards are two different cards that were torn together and separated together appropriately. This is an excellent tutorial, and I really appreciate this. I only mean to point out the shortcomings to help your better videos and describe what the differences are. I could also be completely wrong and that's also okay
people dont do it this way this is so wrong and revealing @0:40 you can clearly see a discrepancie. When folding card in reverse the top card should be on the other end of the red card, so you can see normal whole card not a half