Cain
Straussian
I was going to post this to the Cafe, but I'll do a test run here:
-No Gaffes/Duplicates/cards from different colored deck. That is to say, a truly normal deck of cards.
-Impromptu: can be performed from a shuffled deck in use.
-No Table
-No Counting cards
-No Spelling
-The performer does not turn around while holding the deck
-The spectator is not asked to put the deck behind her back in order to: select a card, mark a card, etc. This applies to the performer as well
-Cards remain in good condition (they're not bent, folded, or ripped).
-Deck is examinable
-No extra props needed (see final bullet. A card to wallet is acceptable because a wallet is a mundane item that you're probably carrying with you wherever you go).
-The fewer the sleights, the better (generally speaking).
-If spectator participation is required, the instructions are not complicated
-The effect is not complicated. What occured can more or less be explained in one sentence.
-Everything is done for a reason.
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Notes:
This is my Platonic ideal of an excellent card effect. I do not regard many of the conditions listed above as anything resembling a sacred rule (except for perhaps the last three). Everything in the above is subordinate to the trick's wow factor.
For example, I do often carry a single duplicate for a gobsmacking transposition effect (since the selected card is signed, nobody suspects anything, but in cases where the deck is later handed out for examination, the dupe has never been discovered). I also sometimes use a different backed card for Chicago Opener. There's a place for counting cards, spelling names and so on assuming the action is not tedious.
I merely regard the above conditions as initial strikes against a trick. They mean the effect must be justifiably strong.
-No Gaffes/Duplicates/cards from different colored deck. That is to say, a truly normal deck of cards.
-Impromptu: can be performed from a shuffled deck in use.
-No Table
-No Counting cards
-No Spelling
-The performer does not turn around while holding the deck
-The spectator is not asked to put the deck behind her back in order to: select a card, mark a card, etc. This applies to the performer as well
-Cards remain in good condition (they're not bent, folded, or ripped).
-Deck is examinable
-No extra props needed (see final bullet. A card to wallet is acceptable because a wallet is a mundane item that you're probably carrying with you wherever you go).
-The fewer the sleights, the better (generally speaking).
-If spectator participation is required, the instructions are not complicated
-The effect is not complicated. What occured can more or less be explained in one sentence.
-Everything is done for a reason.
-------------------------------
Notes:
This is my Platonic ideal of an excellent card effect. I do not regard many of the conditions listed above as anything resembling a sacred rule (except for perhaps the last three). Everything in the above is subordinate to the trick's wow factor.
For example, I do often carry a single duplicate for a gobsmacking transposition effect (since the selected card is signed, nobody suspects anything, but in cases where the deck is later handed out for examination, the dupe has never been discovered). I also sometimes use a different backed card for Chicago Opener. There's a place for counting cards, spelling names and so on assuming the action is not tedious.
I merely regard the above conditions as initial strikes against a trick. They mean the effect must be justifiably strong.