Ooooooh, arty and indeed farty. Tuck and ribbon spread. Court, Aces, spots, Jokers and gaffsAces and Kings
The design is fabulous. I like the letterboxing of the courts and the aces are lovely. Spot cards are as spot cards do but they are blue and turquoise.
Not sure if its the type of cardboard or whatever but they feel different. They feel great and are fun to practise with. They are USPCC so maybe its in my head.
Tuck boxTuck box Jokers, ace of Spades, spread THE ACE OF SPADES! THE ACE OF SPADES
These are a lovely lovely deck and spot on if you’re fed up with Bicycle. A nice, distinctive ace of Spades. Spread nicely fresh out of the box. Nice feel. Classic
This is the second version of there perfectly ordinary deck of cards. They are not perfectly ordinary
Presentation box
They handle very well like a perfectly ordinary deck. There is a gaff card and a few instructions on the less ordinary aspects of the deck and tricks that can be performed.
There are quite a few not ordinary aspects to this deck which I won’t go into. Buy a deck yourself. 🙂
I’ve always been a fan of these two. I’m not a fan of libertarianism though but we’ll get to that.
Constantly challenging the establishment, breaking rules and upsetting peers, they are kinda punk about their approach.
Teller, previously a Latin and Greek teacher is easily the most intelligent magician out there and one of the best sleight of hand guys. The silence was developed early on in his career when he was performing frat houses. He found he could control the audience better. “you look stupid heckling a silent act”
Penn is the louder, more abrasive half. Do not let that fool you though. He is very astute.
One of the things I love about them is the irreverence. They clearly love and respect their art but are honest about it.
Penn has written 4 books as far as I know. I have started reading Sock. I don’t have an opinion yet.
They use magic, misdirection, trickery, legerdemain etc in a search for truth. Penn has rejected libertarianism and came under criticism (from, pretty much exclusively, libertarians) for doing so. He is an empiricist first. Gotta respect anyone who can reject an idea they were following when the evidence calls for it.
I quit smoking about 7/8 months ago and to help I decided to get into magic. Again. I loved it as a wee fella.
A classic beginners book and a deck of cards
It may well be the most frustrating thing I’ve ever done.
A few books on magic Yer bog standard Magic Set.
Magic sets are a thing of wonder, literally and figuratively. I’ve discovered old classics like the cups and balls.
One of the things I found when I started is that sometimes when you find out how a trick is done it can be disappointing. “Oh, was that it”? However a change occurs.
You find that magic, like all art (and it is art) is a performance. The trick is only a part of it. For example the aforementioned cups and balls. I’ve seen quite a few versions. Penn and Teller, Dai Vernon, Ricky Jay and although the same principles apply all three are very different performances.
There are three stages: Knowing how a trick is done, being able to do the trick and performing the trick.
Genuinely a beautiful deck, but then it would be. Designed to look like an old leather book in an old fashioned personal library.
Tuck box front
I usually keep the lower portion of cellophane on the nicer boxes
Tuck box Tuck box side Jokers, gaff, advert and spread Courts and aces
Given the designer there is very likely to be a great deal more to these cards but based on pure aesthetics these are one of the nicest decks I own. They handle beautifully and feel amazing.