This was a fairly cheap set sold by Bob Solari but it worked fine and like most of Bob’s tricks was great value. _EF The now classic effect where three dice are shown in a small case, one is dropped out and the lid replaced. The die vanishes and is found back inside the case. …
_EF Within the pages of this work, historian S.H. Sharp defines and describes seven fundamental principals; including secret: Closures; Reservoirs; Conduits; Liquid Substitutes; Displacement; Siphons; and Hydraulic and Pneumatic Control. The author traces hydraulics and pneumatics as used in the religious wonders of early history – moving and speaking statues, inexhaustible vessels, unfillable basins, etc. …
My favorite Anverdi item is his very clever and perplexing Key Box c. 1982 from almost forty years ago! Until recently I thought it was at the top of the food chain for effects that became known as The Seven Keys to Baldpate by Annemann and invented by Joseph Kolar c. 1927. That is until …
Anything Goes is a delightfully clean and easy to perform prediction routine. The prolific Dutch inventor Anverdi gave Larry Becker the pen and the lucite and shortly there after Larry invented the first mental magic effect using dry-erase ink: which he asked Roy Roth of R.A.R. Magic to produce for him. Anything Goes appears in …
_EF If you are looking for superlative rope magic from some of the finest minds in magic, then check out Give a Magician Enough Rope. You’ll find contributions from masters such as Peter Warlock, Anverdi, Faucett Ross, Van Rinkhuyzen, Martin Gardner, Edward Victor, Stanley Norman, Bill Shewan, H. Fernandes, and Lewis Ganson, just to name …
This version might not be as impressive as Eddy Taytelbaum’s Uncanny Die, but to the audience the effect is exactly the same and this works perfectly. Having a clear lid also makes the reappearance of the die more convincing. There is no doubt that Eddy Taytelbaum created the best version of this effect in both …
There is no doubt that Eddy Taytelbaum created the best version of this effect in both this standard size (2 1/4″ x 1″ x 1″) and jumbo size (3 1/2″ long box). What I am not 100% sure about is who invented the effect. According to Anverdi’s book (page 177) it says Anverdi first saw …
There is no doubt that Eddy Taytelbaum created the best version of this effect in both the standard size (2 1/4″ x 1″ x 1″) and this jumbo size (3 1/2″ long box). What I am not 100% sure about is who invented the effect. According to Anverdi’s book (page 177) it says Anverdi first …
There is no doubt that Eddy Taytelbaum created the best version of this effect in both this standard size (2 1/4″ x 1″ x 1″) and jumbo size (3 1/2″ long box). What I am not 100% sure about is who invented the effect. According to Anverdi’s book (page 177) it says Anverdi first saw …
There is no doubt that Eddy Taytelbaum created the best version of this effect in both the standard size (2 1/4″ x 1″ x 1″) and jumbo size (3 1/2″ long box). What I am not 100% sure about is who invented the effect. According to Anverdi’s book (page 177) it says Anverdi first saw …