Name of a cut
Name of a cut
I was wondering what the “cut” is called when you have a two halves and a car”swings” out of the pack. If you watch David Copperfield do his Grandpa Ace trick, he reveals the ACES this way. I’m trying to learn it but don’t know what the move is called. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!
Re: Name of a cut
I think you are referring to the Piet Forton pop out move.
- Richard Kaufman
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Re: Name of a cut
Awesome. Thanks for the help as usual!! Have a great New Years!
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Re: Name of a cut
Explained in 1967 in this Lecture Notes:
https://www.conjuringarchive.com/list/book/877
Thanks to Denis Behr
https://www.conjuringarchive.com/list/book/877
Thanks to Denis Behr
Re: Name of a cut
Philippe Billot wrote:Explained in 1967 in this Lecture Notes:
https://www.conjuringarchive.com/list/book/877
Thanks to Denis Behr
Would I have to buy those notes or are they available online? That link was confusing
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Re: Name of a cut
The move is explained in many places, since it is so popular. It's also in either Pallbearers Review or Epilogue. I'm sure there are online tutorials.
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- erdnasephile
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Re: Name of a cut
The best description (of which I am aware) of the Piet Forton Pop-out Move can be found here: https://www.vanishingincmagic.com/card- ... revisited/ It includes lots of little details that other descriptions omit. Another really good description can be found in here: https://www.vanishingincmagic.com/magic ... n-gambler/ (plus a boatload of other great magic)
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Re: Name of a cut
For further references in the Archive, I suggest a search like that: https://www.conjuringarchive.com/list/s ... on+pop+out
Re: Name of a cut
Thanks for the help! I was referring to the conjuring webpage you have provided links and seem a bit baffled. Does that webpage only provide a book to look stuff up in and the you have to purchase said book or am I missing something?
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Re: Name of a cut
Conjuring Archive does not contain the content; it tells you where things are.
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Re: Name of a cut
Richard Kaufman wrote:And you can do it with one hand!
As illustrated by the Chief Genii in At The Card Table by Darwin Ortiz, recently back in print. It's a lovely revelation in the Nine Card Location.
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Re: Name of a cut
Richard Kaufman wrote:Conjuring Archive does not contain the content; it tells you where things are.
Yes and no. One column in Conjuring Archive is labeled "AA", for AskAlexander. If there is a check mark in that column for a particular reference, there may be access to the page in AskAlexander, depending on your subscription level.
So some of the references can be available to examine.
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Re: Name of a cut
Yes, but the credit in At the Card Table to Piet Forton is missing. He was the first to do his creation with one hand.
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