and high-level theory through its comprehensive lecture series.
: For coin specialists, the New York Coin Seminar content is the centerpiece of this specific volume.
Welcome to the thirteenth installment of the definitive archive for the modern conjurer. The Ultimate Magician Video Collection has become the gold standard for magic instruction, bridging the gap between classic sleight-of-hand and the cutting-edge visuals of the 21st century.
– A psychological force using a borrowed pen and three torn business cards. Vellum teaches a non-verbal cue system that relies on peripheral vision. It is devastating in close-up, but magicians argue over whether it is “real mind reading” or just cold reading.
Chapter 2 — The Boy Jun was small and quick, a childhood of street fairs and back-alley stages leaving him with nimble fingers and a steady grin. He performed coin vanishings that left audiences laughing, not baffled—until one night he stopped mid-trick and a child in the front row began to cry because the moon had gone from the sky. Jun left town the next morning with a bruise shaped like a question mark on his shoulder and a wallet full of unfamiliar coins stamped with a lighthouse.
Designed specifically for young children, a great way to introduce the Arabic alphabet. Take a look at our flashcard video to accompany these flashcards and how to pronounce the letters.
These flashcards are completely FREE for personal, educational and non-commercial use.
and high-level theory through its comprehensive lecture series.
: For coin specialists, the New York Coin Seminar content is the centerpiece of this specific volume.
Welcome to the thirteenth installment of the definitive archive for the modern conjurer. The Ultimate Magician Video Collection has become the gold standard for magic instruction, bridging the gap between classic sleight-of-hand and the cutting-edge visuals of the 21st century.
– A psychological force using a borrowed pen and three torn business cards. Vellum teaches a non-verbal cue system that relies on peripheral vision. It is devastating in close-up, but magicians argue over whether it is “real mind reading” or just cold reading.
Chapter 2 — The Boy Jun was small and quick, a childhood of street fairs and back-alley stages leaving him with nimble fingers and a steady grin. He performed coin vanishings that left audiences laughing, not baffled—until one night he stopped mid-trick and a child in the front row began to cry because the moon had gone from the sky. Jun left town the next morning with a bruise shaped like a question mark on his shoulder and a wallet full of unfamiliar coins stamped with a lighthouse.
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