*STARTS HERE -->* 6:30 *When controlling just one card I prefer "losing" it at the beginning to the bottom of the deck because now I don't have to watch it as I wash the deck. Of course after the wash I can move that card anywhere I want.* 22:33 *Great video!*
I've got no intentions of ever doing these tricks. BUT.....I found your video more interesting than say ,a magician doing a trick. Although I really admire good magicians, at the back of my mind is, if I knew how to do it it might spoil the trick for me. The exact opposite happened. It made me admire the skill it takes to perform the trick faultlessly. ( Subscribed 👍 )
I love how he explains these techniques so well... then casually deals himself the four aces at the end! I can't figure that out other than it has to do with the overhand shuffle. Thanks for the video!
I am stacking the 4 aces from the bottom by 'milking' them under indifferent cards from the top. So every 3 cards run from the top gets a card from the bottom. Then I injog, shuffle fair, and then shuffle again, dropping the stack that I made under the injog to the top. It's basic overhand stacking from a bottom stock.
@@thecommonmagician Gotcha and now I see thanks! Hard to make out the injog but I can see how you stack it on top. Edit: now I see it.. a single card slightly moved back.
@@thecommonmagician *When controlling just one card I prefer "losing" it at the beginning to the bottom of the deck because now I don't have to watch it as I wash the deck, just keep it on the bottom of at least one stack of cards. Of course after the wash I can move that card anywhere I want.* 22:33 *Great video!*
Usually I watch/follow Daniel Madison, Jason Ladanye, Alex Pandrea, Sean Devine, this is the first video from you what I have watched now and I have immediatly subscribed, thx a lot, great work 🃏♦️
I'm a big fan of using obvious techniques so brazenly and confidently, no-one lands on the obvious solution. A favourite is using a pressure fan instead of your "shallow spread". You can literally hide one whole half of the deck in an apparently face-up fan being face-down, this way, so it's trivial to hide a stack. The flourish of making the fan then closing it unhurriedly with one hand, under cover of casual patter, distracts the participants very effectively. Another great vid, thanks!
sweet! ive been looking for something like this for a while. THANK YOU. also i love longer instructional videos and really appreciate this. keep it up.
So that's how you wash the cards? I used to wash my decks in my washing machine. Made the cards fall apart, rip and fade in the water. Thanks for your very detailed tutorial :)
I think I could do one of these techniques -- the wonderfully deceptive keep-a-finger-on-your-card-at-all-times wash. It makes me laugh that a magician could get away with that--- it's so simple, almost crude -- and obviously undetectable if skillfully executed. Thanks for the entertaining demo!
I am an expert magician and saw JASON wondering how he controls during a wash. Jason is way too advanced for me with his gambling stuff and my card tricks do not involve any poker stuff because I do mentalism stuff thats visual but I live eat and breathe card magic. I appreciate your sharing.
Hi thanks for your tutorial, really intricate and full of details. Appreciate you sharing this with the community :) I just wanted to ask about the double-fit card. Is it simply two cards glued/taped together? Is there any formal work/references on the usage of double-fit cards?
You make them by rubber cementing 2 cards together. Put a thin coat on both cards, let them air dry for a few minutes. They will then stick together and be immediately ready to use.
@@thecommonmagician Thank you! I realized the solution right after I made the comment. As of this typing I have two cards being vacuum pressed together. They will look and work fantastic!
You would be looking to apprentice with card cheating authorities or seeking out private tutoring. Folks like Ortiz, Forte, etc. Or people that have learned from them.
@larryfriedlander7000 well, either... - he controls the spin to land on a force (he has practiced spinning over an arrangement of cards to have some control) - the spin is random, but the outcome is somehow rigged with multiple outs - he knows the target and he does only a few takes until he hits it - magic ...among other possibilities.
Hey 👋 I’m really interested in gambling sleight of hand. What’s your name? Or rather said how do I search you up on penguin ? I’d love to buy products of yours 😊
I think you talk way too much about OTHER STUFF YOU ARE NOT SHOWING OR EXPLAING and I have to wonder why you lost me you are not doing anything but talking about stuff you wont even be showing.. I would reshoot this video and show it. not slugs
I'll humor your comment here... what am I "not showing" that you want to see? I am showing and explaining absolutely everything that I do and use in this hour of video. If you think that slug management isn't relevant to this subject, I'm afraid you may be fooling yourself.