All posts by Colin

3♥ Week Three

To become an adept at second dealing is as difficult a task as can be given in card handling, but once acquired, like many other arts, it is as easy as habit.

This is an example of how little previous experience I have with EATCT. In thinking about my goals for the year a passable second deal was top of the list. It is a move I have always been fascinated by and even remember being accused of using when playing cards at school. I have never attempted to do it but assumed that it would be something that a fair bit of time was devoted to in the book.

Turns out there are roughly two pages discussing the second deal and half of one page is taken up with illustrations. I was a bit surprised but it just shows that I don’t have much more experience with Erdnase than I do with dealing seconds.

It is not going to affect my goal at all. I want to transition myself to dealing like a right-handed person would, which means I need to spend a bunch of time just dealing cards, so I might as well spend that time dealing seconds.

Jason England has a great section in Fundamentals 1 going over the strike second, which interestingly is not one of the ways mentioned by Erdnase, so I am going to work on that as I deal countless right handed hands.

I’ve never quite made up my mind on Daniel Madison but I do like these cards and love the commercial.

 

The Dealers by Daniel Madison from Ellusionist on Vimeo.

2♥ Week Two

A common problem I run into when embarking on a new project is just how quickly, and far, I tend to fall down the rabbit hole of what ever subject has caught my interest.

I am working with a a plain old Dover paperback copy of EATCT which cost $12. It is a perfectly acceptable edition for this years project. That doesn’t mean, however, that I am satisfied with owning only it. If money wasn’t a factor I would be registering an account with Potter Auctions where a first edition is about to hit the block. It is expected to go for $3000 – $4000 according to the catalog so just slightly more than what I can justify right now.

erdnase-6_1Closer to my price range is the waterproof edition that is available over at Dan & Dave‘s website (and other online Magic shops like magictrick.com). At $25 and with those ever enticing words ‘Limited Edition’ attached to it I can see myself picking one of those up in the not too distant future. I also came across a Erdnase notebook that has all the text removed but the line drawings still in their proper places that I think would be great for logging my progress once I am a little more active with working on the moves.

One thing that I have ordered is a copy of Unmasking Erdnase by David Ben and published through Magaicana. It is listed as sold out on Magicana’s website but I believe I was able to track one down.

My humble Dover edition is all I truly need but I am sure by the end of the year I will have a nice little section on my bookshelf devoted to this project.

Progress on the read though is a little slow this week. I am part of a slightly out of control book club and am trying to finish off a couple of titles from that list and much of my ‘Magic Time’ is being spent working on the routine I am going to be preforming at the club’s annual dinner in February.

 

 

A♥ – Week one

week one

yhst-137970348157658_2295_1394300351For years I have used the excuse that I deal left handed and it is tricky to transpose directions when learning card magic. This is a pretty lame excuse and really it just comes down to the fact that sometimes I am a bit lazy. So  to correct this I am going to spend the upcoming year with S. W. Erdnase and his Expert At The Card Table. If you are unfamiliar with the book it is considered to be one of the must have books in any card workers library and is aimed primarily at gambling slights.

I have spent some time trying to decide the best route for beginning this journey. EATCT is not a particularly long book but many of the moves that it teaches take an incredible amount of time to be able to preform undetected. Do I simply start at the beginning and once I am comfortable with a move continue on to the next one? That is what I would do if I thought that I would be able to execute the moves within a week or so but that is far from realistic. What I have decided to do is sit down and do an inital read through of the book. This will give me an understanding of where Erdnase is likely to lead me and help be focus on where I want to focus my attention first.

I also plan to learn to deal from a right handed perspective. It is just an exercise in muscle memory and certainly wont hurt to be able to do thing either left or right handed.

I am, and will always be, a book person so my main source for this project will be a paperback copy of EATCT. The current Dover edition to be exact. There is a mulit-disc dvd version that I have heard mixed reviews of that I may look at tracking down later on. I have however purchased a copy of Jason England’s Foundations Vol 1. to lend some extra visuals to a number of things taught by Erdnase. And I have grabbed a couple of decks of Bee’s as they are more suited to gambling slights.

So that is the game plan. The goals, having not yet read the book, are to be able to second deal and have a least two usable false shuffles at my disposal by the end of the year. There are also a number of books about Erdnase that I look forward to reading.