(1 customer review)

Tile Deal (Magic Tile Puzzle) by Martin Duffy, Winston Freer

(c. 1976,2010)

Thank-you so much for taking the time to update and improve the content on MartinsMagic.com. It has taken twenty years to build this website and we’re just getting started! You can read more about our History Project here.

With your help we can continue to grow the site and maintain it’s standing as the Largest Online Magic Collection today and as a free resource for all magicians to share around the world. Please take the time to fill-in as many details below as you can. (We look at all submissions, but It might take a few days to validate your comments and make the changes so please bear with us.)

1 review for Tile Deal (Magic Tile Puzzle) by Martin Duffy, Winston Freer

  1. Andy Martin

    Wow! Winston Freer was a Genius! What an incredible miracle this effect is! Very different in method from anything similar that I have seen. This is based on a principle developed by Paul Curry called the Curry Paradaox c. 1953. However Freer adds an ingenious allowance for the area lost by redistribution which allows you to show the area to be EXACTLY THE SAME, before and after the removal of three tiles.

    This is a really great version of the Tile Deal or Magic Tile Puzzle by Winston Freer built by Martin Duffy of the UK. It is very nicely made and finished.  It is very similar in size and dimensions to the John Rogers version, but this is all wood instead of Corian tiles.  It could even be an early version of John Rogers version.

    To be honest although the definitive collector’s version is probably the John Rogers version, if you want to perform this effect, then this all wooden version is easier to perform.  It is about 10oz lighter and the tiles are easier to get out by hand instead of having to tip them out.  If you are a casual performer it won’t matter, but if you were doing this a lot I think the Corian would be harder to use.  Also I think the Corian might in fact be more brittle because in the instructions is says perform on a soft mat to avoid chipping the tiles.)

    (Notice: the three final photos show a comparison with the John Rogers version, but of course you only get this wooden one.)

Add a review

If you want to submit a product review click here.

You may also like…