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Nightshades: Difference between revisions
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[[Nightshades]] was a product by [[Paul Harris]] marketed around 1993 in which a pen is slid across the face of a dollar bill, causing a pair of sunglasses you just drew on George Washington's face to flip up off his eyes and onto his forehead. | [[File:Night-shade.jpg|right|150px]] [[Nightshades]] was a product by [[Paul Harris]] marketed around 1993 in which a pen is slid across the face of a dollar bill, causing a pair of sunglasses you just drew on George Washington's face to flip up off his eyes and onto his forehead. | ||
An impromptu version was later published is "Improv Nightshades" in [[Art of Astonishment Vol 1. | An impromptu version was later published is "Improv Nightshades" in [[Art of Astonishment Vol 1. |
Revision as of 14:24, 9 December 2009
Nightshades was a product by Paul Harris marketed around 1993 in which a pen is slid across the face of a dollar bill, causing a pair of sunglasses you just drew on George Washington's face to flip up off his eyes and onto his forehead.
An impromptu version was later published is "Improv Nightshades" in [[Art of Astonishment Vol 1.
Ultra Visual Nightshades by Mark Allen was released as a "Paul Harris Presents" product (2007). It allowed for the glasses to move without any cover with just a little shake.
An improved version of the pen, along with routine "Bulldog Nightshades", was released on Harris' True Astonishment series DVD #9.
Variations
- "Let George Do It" (a presentation for Paul Harris' NightShades) in the "Little Egypt Gazette: Lecture '96" by Steve Bryant (1996)