Discover 10 Astonishing Effects with Coins, Sharpies, and Business Cards
Unveiling a collection of ten incredible tricks featured in the British IBM magazine, The Budget, this PDF showcases Cameron’s celebrated column.
This installment marks his third consecutive contribution, and this time, the challenge was clear: NO CARD TRICKS!
Within this comprehensive 33-page guide, you’ll uncover impactful, practical, and easy-to-execute miracles using everyday items like coins, Sharpies, and business cards.
Each effect is designed for maximum impact while requiring only fundamental sleight-of-hand skills.
Contents:
- Hold On: The magician presents a coin holder for examination. A borrowed quarter seemingly melts into the holder, which can then be handed to the spectator for thorough inspection!
- The Signed Coin: A captivating signed coin-to-impossible-location effect inspired by Brother John Hamman’s classic, The Signed Card.
- Humming Words: Twelve business cards, each marked with a different letter, are shuffled by a spectator. The magician, with his back turned, divines the word created by the spectator, culminating in a stunning prediction reveal.
- The Unfolding: A highly commercial transposition using business cards.
- Copper, Silver, Ring: A captivating copper/silver routine featuring a borrowed ring that is sure to impress.
- Who’s Laughing Now? A delightful and straightforward prediction effect with a surprising twist!
- Shades of Silver: A shadow coin routine utilizing just four coins and no gimmicks, ending with an unexpected backfire.
- COAT: Five objects are sketched on business cards. After a spectator selects one, the magician reveals a clever prediction. This is a fantastic trick to keep in your wallet!
- Where Eagles Dare: For the first time in print, a signed silver coin is placed between two copper coins for safekeeping. Without any suspicious moves, the signed coin vanishes, only to be found in the magician’s pocket.
- Compact Sharpie: Making its debut in print, the magician produces a full-sized Sharpie from a cap containing just a hint of the marker. The Sharpie is immediately examinable!