Title: Grandfather's Aces
Description: Move
LarryDK - April 3, 2006 06:33 AM (GMT)
Anyone Topic on Grandfather's Aces..
Anyway, what is the move he used to produce the aces? It looks familiar, but forgot the name of it.
Cheers..
rknights - April 3, 2006 08:42 AM (GMT)
you are talking about Copperfield's?? Think it was shotgun aces from PMagic.. it's the first I have seen since I started, don't know who is the creator of that though...
groovesoul - April 3, 2006 12:23 PM (GMT)
Dream of Aces - Camirand Magic - Gary Ouellet and Alain Choquette
is another... perhaps what Grandpa's Aces is built on.
Just my 2 cents.
LarryDK - April 3, 2006 12:31 PM (GMT)
You guys are wrong, i dun mean how was grandfather's aces is done.
I wan to know the move when he was doing the intial aces production.
bigbadwolf - April 3, 2006 12:38 PM (GMT)
i think that was correct.
the instant download Shotgun Aces from PMagic is similar to David Copperfield's move
Shade - April 3, 2006 12:43 PM (GMT)
| QUOTE (LarryDK @ Apr 3 2006, 08:31 PM) |
You guys are wrong, i dun mean how was grandfather's aces is done.
I wan to know the move when he was doing the intial aces production. |
The move that he used to produce the Aces is a move by Frenchman Piet Forton; often known as the "Piet Forton Popout move"
Hope that's what you're looking for.
LarryDK - April 3, 2006 12:46 PM (GMT)
thanks Dude, that is the one, okie, where can i learn this move? In Which DVD?
HarapanOng - April 3, 2006 12:57 PM (GMT)
This move can be found in Jeff McBride: Art of Card manipulation Volume 1, during his table act.
He sort of variated on it, but he basically teaches his variation, which he calls the Hip Hop Popout Move. But it's only a minor change. Besides, he will tell you how the original move was actually done.
P.S. In case the previous paragraph doesn't make sense, the original Piet Forton Move has the packets more tilted. McBride does it less tilted, and that's the only change. :)