Phade by PHontheRoof
Card Tricks
Spectrum by R. Paul Wilson
“This deck does so much work for you it deserves a Christmas bonus.” – David Regal
“Spectrum is super cool! It is a combination of color changing deck, triumph, and kickback all in the same trick…I LOVE it!” – Cody S. Fisher
Forgotten Princess by Alexander Marsh
“This is a great update on a classic, that is going straight in my close up mentalism repertoire. The extra-hypnotic touch from Alex, makes of this effect a new experience that the the audience will never forget” – Luca Volpe
“Just when you think you have seen it all, Alex comes along and breaths new life into a classic effect that blows all other presentations out of the water!” – Michael Murray
THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO THE SWITCH by Alex Pandrea
PART I : 2 Card Deck Switches
- Top Change Tutorial
- Flicker Switch
- Table Spread Switch
- Ultra Switch
- Top Card Second-Switch
- WTF Card Switch
PCTC Productions Presents UNLINK Remastered by Jordan Victoria
With UNLINK Remastered, you will now be able to make miracles with only one gimmick.
The only limit is your imagination. You’ll be able to make a signed card vanish, appear, transpose into another, and many more…
Don’t stop thinking. Now use gaff cards with UNLINK Remastered: double back, double face, blank face, specially printed playing cards… Anything can be used with this tool!
King Brand by Bill Goodwin
For a decade now, King Brand has been a favorite trick of ours. Visually dynamic, the effect couldn’t be simpler: The deck is removed and only four cards are presented, the two red Kings and and the two black fours. With one pair sandwiched between the other, they visually trade places under impossible conditions. The plot builds in three phases with the final transposition happening in a spectator’s own hand.
Pure Cards Across by Mark Leveridge
Two sets of 10 cards are counted out fairly and openly onto a spectator’s hand before being dropped into two glass tumblers where they can be clearly seen.
One at a time three cards are invisibly moved from one glass to the other, and when the piles are counted back onto the spectator’s hand again, the first glass only contains 7 cards and the other 13.