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It's a Pip: Difference between revisions
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[[It's a Pip]] was an effect first described in The [[Conjuror's Magazine | [[It's a Pip]] was an effect first described in The [[Conjuror's Magazine (Locke)]], Aug [[1791]], for changing the pip (the index) using a liquid that could be rubbed off. | ||
off. | |||
An It's a Pip liquid made of special latex ink was devised by [[Caryl Fleming]] and [[Charles W. Fricke]] (Judge) in 1937 to accomplish the It's a Pip effect. It is no longer manufactured, in large part because much (but by no means all) of its applications can be accommodated by dry erase markers. | An It's a Pip liquid made of special latex ink was devised by [[Caryl Fleming]] and [[Charles W. Fricke]] (Judge) in [[1937]] (See ad in [[The Linking Ring]], Vol. 17, no. 7, september) to accomplish the It's a Pip effect. It is no longer manufactured, in large part because much (but by no means all) of its applications can be accommodated by dry erase markers. | ||
== References == | == References == |
Latest revision as of 14:52, 13 February 2012
It's a Pip was an effect first described in The Conjuror's Magazine (Locke), Aug 1791, for changing the pip (the index) using a liquid that could be rubbed off.
An It's a Pip liquid made of special latex ink was devised by Caryl Fleming and Charles W. Fricke (Judge) in 1937 (See ad in The Linking Ring, Vol. 17, no. 7, september) to accomplish the It's a Pip effect. It is no longer manufactured, in large part because much (but by no means all) of its applications can be accommodated by dry erase markers.