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Easy Does It - Small-Scale Tricks to Dazzle
Your Audience
by: Chris Lloyd
How to Get Started If
You're a Beginner
Whether you've been practicing magic for two days, two years, or twenty,
the only effective magic trick is one that actually "fools" your
audience. This ability to create a good illusion depends in huge part on
one thing: rehearsing!
Let's face it-no matter how great a trick is or how useful a magic prop
is, you won't surprise or delight anyone unless it's performed smoothly
and confidently. What if you drop your deck of cards or accidentally
mishandle a coin? The illusion will be destroyed, and you'll have lost
your audience's trust.
When you're just starting out it's understandable that you'll have to
practice in front of an audience several times before you get it just
right. No one expects you to be perfect right away. But you also can't
expect to fool anyone unless you put in the time to practice your skills
and work with your props (if you are using any).
The tricks in this chapter were chosen because they are simple,
effective, fun to perform, and appealing to just about any audience. You
can delight a crowd of schoolchildren with them, or you can test them
out on adults. But before you do, practice, practice, practice to get it
right!
For now, let's cut straight to the chase and talk more specifically
about these simple yet stunning tricks. Then, at the end of this chapter
I'll give you some highly effective strategies and techniques I used
when I was just starting out!
Sleight of Hand
What exactly is sleight (pronounced "slite") of hand? This term refers
to a broad category of magic tricks that relies on your skills and
techniques as well as the facility of your fingers and hands. In other
words, these are tricks that depend on your skill and dexterity to fool
the audience, much more so than on props or gimmicks. It's your fingers
that do the work, not a manufacturer's product.
Another way of saying all this is that a sleight of hand is a trick that
is performed so well and so deftly that the audience can't tell
precisely how it was done!
There's a great word for this that every magician should know:
"legerdemain." This word comes to us from the old French phrase "leger
de main," in which "leger" translates as light, and "de main" means "of
hand." So if you perform with a light touch, that's the ideal form of
legerdemain.
This deftness applies to most magic tricks, though, not just sleight of
hand! In fact, most of tricks we're going to discuss involve sleight of
hand, from shuffling cards to palming coins. Even levitation, which
we'll discuss in Chapter 4, involves sleight of hand-although that's
more like "sleight of foot!"
Just keep in mind that accomplishing many of the following tricks
successfully involves not just a working knowledge of the techniques but
also the ability to carry them out easily and without a lot of obvious
effort. Another good reason to get in as much practice as you can!
This article was extracted from the book 'Discover The Magic Trick
Secrets You're Not Supposed To Know'. To find out more please visit
www.DiscoverMagicTricks.com
About The Author
Chris Lloyd is the author of "Discover The Magic Trick Secrets You're
Not Supposed To Know". His website can be found at
www.DiscoverMagicTricks.com
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