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Archive for January 10th, 2009

Jan 10 2009

Nuts & Bolts - My Love / Hate Affair With Card Tricks

I think I’ve mentioned here that I tend to perform at Renaissance Faires and the like - as such, it’s not easy to do card tricks.*

Well, you can do card tricks, but since I was trained to be Historically Neutral if not Historically Accurate, most of the card tricks you’ll see on TV are not in fact available to me. Why? Because they rely on the size and shape of modern playing cards. Back in the day, most playing cards weren’t as thin or the same size as a standard “poker” deck of cards - heck, it wasn’t until the 17th Century or so that the suits of playing cards were standardized, and that was done by the French!

So, I didn’t do card tricks at Renaissnace Faires.

I also didn’t do card tricks outside of Renaissance Faires.  In fact, for 6 of the 8 or so years I’ve been doing this stuff for money, I didn’t do much in the way of card tricks at all.  Partially because I didn’t really like doing them, and partially (and my ego says primarily) because every magician on God’s Green Earth does card tricks. In fact, many of your casual acquaintances do card tricks - and card tricks are very very easy to do very very badly.

I didn’t want to be that person, y’see.

Well, fastwind to more recent days, and I find myself in posession of about five card tricks I know and am very happy with.  And friends…

Five Tricks Makes A Routine

And A Routine Can Make A Career

The toughest part of finding tricks I like have to do with suitability to my own skills, character and performing environment.  Some stuff is staggering in its effect, but requires so much preparation and “reset” that it’s impractical (my friend Trey touches on this over at Out Of The Ordinary - Caution: Strong Language and Magician Rage) .

For me, I have short, thick, sausage like fingers. A standard size playing card can juuuust about hide behind my meat-patty like mitt. Not the kind of hands one would expect Awesome Card Manipulation from.

On top of that, who the heck expects a guy with a name like “Tobias the Adequate” to be brilliant at card tricks? Not me, I can tell you!

However, because I kept looking, and searching, I found, at first, 2 tricks I liked. Then a third, and a fourth… and a fifth.  And now I have a nice little card routine which I can bust out if the need or desire arises. Each one is a bit more “impossible” than the one before it, ending up with my plucking a card out of someone’s mind without any clear indication of how I got the information.

It’ll be a darn site easier to tote than all that rope, I’ll wager.

Oh, and as a side note - one of those five tricks will be making a debut in my RenFaire show. On Renaissance-looking playing cards.

addendum - There will be a page coming into existance discussing Five Tricks You Can Turn Into A Career once I get some research and vetting done on the sources for these tricks. I want to give credit where credit is due, you see… 

* I know, there are RenFaire performers who do card tricks with modern playing cards and they haven’t been run out of town. Well, they’re them and I’m me…

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Jan 10 2009

Starting a Conversation - Best “Lesson Learned”?

Published by theadequate under Random Edit This

There will be a “real” AdequateBlog post up this afternoon - possibly two - but in my dotage I left the notebook containing all the stuff I jotted down for those posts back at the Day Job last night.  You can point and laugh now.

In the interim, I would love to start a conversation here - this isn’t a “read only” environment, you know - and as I get more readers from the RenFaire Web Ring and the various sources I put this thing out to, I’m wondering …

I’m sharing stuff I’ve learned about magic, performing and faires with y’all - what are some of the things you’d like to share with your fellow AdequateFans? What’s the best “lesson learned” that you have brought away from your time out on site, performing, studying magic, and so on?

Mine is still “Get there early” - I’ve said it before and I will probably say it a dozen more times before the month is out, getting to your venue well ahead of time is essential to having a clue as to what’s going on later.  As Penn and Teller put it in more than one book and interview

Being early is being on time. Being on time is being late. Being late is inexcusable.

So… what’s some good advice you’d like to share? I’m not working in a vacuum here, people - let me know!

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