So who was the first to publish the in the hands false cut where you swing over the top packet taking it into left hand, then get another break with right forefinger and then grab the bottom packet with the "fork of thumb", at the same time grabbing back the top packet with right thumb tip and right ring finger? There seems to be a lot of variations based on this. View Member Profile Send Email Find Member's Topics Find Member's Posts Send Instant Message JenniferG Note how he misses to Hit from time to time. Here’s John Scarne zipping through the Leipzig thing and the Hit Double Lift. All material culled from his “The Phoenix” magazine. This book better known nowadays as “The Best In Magic”. My starting point was the already mentioned Leipzig Spin Pass which I fell over in Bruce Elliott’s “Magic 100 New Tricks,” back in the parchment and quill days. If that was a chunter, it's finished now. It would be nice to see his collected works. Frank Garcia, for one, has what he calls “The FT Cut” in (I think) “Super Subtle Card Miracles”. And I’m sure everybody else has has done the same. My humble little self came up with several variations of the “Thompson Cut,” including the “master” effort long before I’d ever heard of him. That said, I’ve always been disappointed that Thompson gets the sole credit for all the versions around. View Member Profile Send Email Find Member's Topics Find Member's Posts Send Instant Message Alan SmitheeĪs I was reading this I started thinking “Leipzig Spin Pass/Cut” or Frank Thompson. It's not meant to be rigorously burned, just something done super casually after you "shuffle." I really like the swivel cut a lot (both as a genuine and false cut). In the hands, I just like to do an "Undercut Swivel" false cut - literally just swivel the bottom half into my left hand, instead of the top half like a real swivel cut. Two of them require a table: Jay Ose False Cut (amazing because you can have the spectator do it too!) and "Swing False Cut" (sorry totally forget the real name - it's one where you swing cut and bring your hands together, then place the cards in your right hand down on the table first, then just replace the packet you swung off into your left back on top.so devious). are probably the three simplest to perform, because they are all quick and direct. And the one you did in your GW Hunter demo (with the two swing cuts and a break in between) is great as well.īut honestly the three false cuts I use the most persnally, and find the most disarming. I also really like to do the Pendulum False Cut that Oz Pearlman teaches on his Born To Perform Card Magic DVD, lots of packets moving around lol. I spent a lot of time with cardistry before getting into magic, so I am comfortable with Sybil and other "fancy-looking" false cuts in my hands. View Member Profile Send Email Find Member's Topics Find Member's Posts Send Instant Message Matt G
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