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Messages - Cardini

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1
Magical Cardistry Bonanza / Re: DeLand's Automatic Deck
« on: March 09, 2016, 09:03:20 AM »
Oh that ... I dunno... the board rules read pretty strict about reveals, and it's only 103 years old, and was found in probably every 5 and dime in the country ...

Here you go (I better not get in trouble with the cabal of magicians!): http://magicmakersinc.com/learndeland/

Interestingly, when I tried figuring it out on my own, I got the stack backwards, but the corner indexes still work--they just tell you the next card, not the previous one in that case.

3
Magical Cardistry Bonanza / Re: DeLand's Automatic Deck
« on: March 07, 2016, 10:02:18 PM »
Finally found it. Full instructions, too, so thanks!

Better yet, I found they did a professionally-produced trailer for it. That's just adorable.

5
Unfortuantely, two points:

1) I know the principle, not the details of this particular variation
2) I suck.

(3, I could no longer lay claim to be The Anonymous Rando)

If I were Penn, I could probably come up with a way to reduce the audience to just those in the know, like a farmer slaughtering sheep to bring down the size of the herd. But unfortunately, I don't think I could break things down without being completely obvious about it, not with the little verbal flourishes he uses as cover.

So I think I'll just leave it for now, secure in my triumph (even if you don't believe me!)



6
Alas, I'm not a jerk, and am not going to drop hints to a working magician's signature trick. So I'll unfortunately have to carry on for the rest of my life with the tragic knowledge that someone, somewhere doesn't believe some anonymous rando from the internet figured out a particularly well-crafted trick. :)

Also, I'm totally going to start performing magic as The Anonymous Rando.

7
Not for carrying around, but for storage. I mean, sure, you can keep them locked in a filing cabinet, but what's the fun in that? A nondescript box with a hidden magnetic catch, or a drawer with a false bottom would be way cooler. I would also take "hidden nook cut into the drywall behind a painting" as an acceptable answer.

8
Magical Cardistry Bonanza / Re: DeLand's Automatic Deck
« on: February 29, 2016, 12:45:00 PM »
Thanks, I'll take a look and see if I can find anything. I'm really just interested in them as a curiosity, and admire the ingenuity (if not the advisability) of baking so many markings into a single deck.

9
I've always wanted to build something like this: http://www.thewoodwhisperer.com/articles/secret-locks-and-compartments-woodworking-magic-tricks/ to store gaffs and packet tricks.

10
They didn't have a rewind button :)

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Magical Cardistry Bonanza / DeLand's Automatic Deck
« on: February 27, 2016, 11:37:40 PM »
I've got one of these... an older copy, not entirely sure of the vintage. It's cute. I didn't have any instructions with mine (it was second-hand), but I was easily able to figure out the left-hand index, and with some googling, the right-hand index (and that it's got a stack based on a non-chased Si Stebbins). But can't seem to find out anything on the stuff in the middle (something to do with depths of cuts). Anyone know or have a link to full instructions?

12
Do my eyes deceive me, or when he does the half-up, half-down table riffle shuffle, does he execute a perfect, faro-style shuffle?

Is Kostya a member of the club as well?

I watched it like 10 times and tried to copy him step by step... but even if he execute a perfect faro shuffle, I still couldn't get how he managed to control the cards after the  children/drunk guy shuffle... Maybe only maybe though he actually cull the cards perfectly.

You can see the key move. The camera actually gets a good look at it (as do Penn and Teller). I'd never be able to pull it off in a million years, especially with two of the most famous magicians in the world burning Chicago-fire-sized holes in my hands (despite the board moniker, I can't pull off anything more difficult than a glide without looking like an idiot).

The only advice I would give is to first figure out when it happened. This holds for any trick, I suppose, but with this one, with a couple viewings, you can clearly figure out logically when the key move musthave happened. Then figure out what must have happened. Only then can you figure out how (or at least that's how I clued into his method).

13
A Cellar of Fine Vintages / Re: Goodwill Gold
« on: February 27, 2016, 09:20:24 PM »
That's a very good idea, thanks! This is the same thrift store I found Drueke chessboard last year (http://www.chessusa.com/product/DB-102.html ) so needless to say, I'll be a regular from now on!

With the exception of 1 of the expert backs, none of them have two jokers (and I suspect it was robbed from the pack with none). When was the second joker added to USPC decks? And would they have come with advertising cards back then?

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A Cellar of Fine Vintages / Re: Goodwill Gold
« on: February 26, 2016, 12:25:55 AM »
So here's a couple pictures. I hate opening those stupid long tucks, as it feels like I'm damaging the box every time I do it. Second shot has all the decks in the same order as the first. Now that I've got them out to really get a good look at them, I notice the bottom row (and sealed one, obviously, are still in factory order, and look like they could have been manufactured yesterday! Rest of them at least have some use (and one has lost its joker), but again, I think I did pretty good for $5!

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A Cellar of Fine Vintages / Goodwill Gold
« on: February 24, 2016, 12:54:29 AM »
Hi, everyone, first-time poster.

I'm not a collector, at least not of vintage decks, but I think I might have Done Good.

Now, I like to thrift for boardgames, as the current boardgame renaissance has mostly passed by the kinds of games I like (abstract strategy and classic card games).But  I nearly always skip over the playing cards, since I've certainly got plenty already, and they're cheap enough that second-hand doesn't really make sense. But for some reason (maybe it was the larger than usual number of decks), I decided to paw through them today. There ended up being quite a load of Bicycles, though not rider backs.

I've handled enough decks (having gone through my magic phase) to know that these were old, no coating on the box, just plain paper, and some sort of tax stamp, etc.. At $.49 a deck, I figured it was worth speculating a bit. So I picked up a couple of the ones in the best shape. Wasn't till I got in my car that I made out the cancel in black on the stamps: 4-1-19. At that point, I went back into the shop and picked up anything that looked remotely old. They vary from well-played but still snappy, to still-in-the-original-wax-paper. Boxes range from "pretty chewy" to "mint, but for the glue that didn't last 100 years".

My haul:
bikes (all with at least portions of the stamp dating to no later than 1924, most with that 4-1-19 cancel visible)::
5 expert backs
2 tangent backs
1 wheel back
1 new fan back

others:
1 rexall drug (same stamp as the bikes)
1 uncle sam (only deck not to have a stamp, appears later, as flap states 1942)
1 arrco canasta (later as well, card in shrink, having the 1940-1965 stamp)

I can post pics if anyone is interested. Interestingly, none of the bicycles seem to line up with the alphabetic dating system found on cypressfilms.com. The main "collection" (i.e., not the Uncle Sam and Canasta decks) seem to have had an interesting legacy. Clearly someone was enough of an avid card player to buy up 10 decks, but somehow only through a couple, leaving most of them close to intact for 100 years.

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