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Dunbury Delusion: Difference between revisions

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* "The Coué Test" ([[Roberto Giobbi]]): ''[[Card College]], Vol. 1'' (1996)   
* "The Coué Test" ([[Roberto Giobbi]]): ''[[Card College]], Vol. 1'' (1996)   
* "Dunbury Delusion Revisited" (David Solomon): ''[[Solomon's Mind: The Card Mysteries of David Solomon]]'' (1997)
* "Dunbury Delusion Revisited" (David Solomon): ''[[Solomon's Mind: The Card Mysteries of David Solomon]]'' (1997)
* "The Dunbury Delusion"): ''[[Genii 2000 September|Genii]]'', Vol. 63, No. 9 (September 2000, p. 61) [[Jim Swain]] had a great handling of it using something he called the Cool-Out Move.
* "The Dunbury Delusion": ''[[Genii 2000 September|Genii]]'', Vol. 63, No. 9 (September 2000, p. 61) [[Jim Swain]] had a great handling of it using something he called the Cool-Out Move.
* "Bob’s Delusion" by [[Bob King]]): ''[[Precursor]]'', No. 83 (July 2002)
* "Bob’s Delusion" ([[Bob King]]): ''[[Precursor]]'', No. 83 (July 2002)
* "Dunbury Drop" ([[David Ben]]): ''[[Tricks]]'' (2003)
* "Dunbury Drop" ([[David Ben]]): ''[[Tricks]]'' (2003)
* "The Trick That NEVER Fails" by [[Paul Cummins]]): ''[[Precursor]]'' Date ?
* "The Trick That NEVER Fails" ([[Paul Cummins]]): ''[[Precursor]]'' Date ?


==Videos==
==Videos==

Revision as of 09:43, 27 May 2016

Dunbury Delusion is a classic card routine credited to Charlie Miller in Expert Card Technique where the audience is led to believe the magician has initially failed.

Plot: A card having been chosen and returned to the pack without the magician knowing what was selected. The magician removes three cards stating they will help him find the selected card, but the spectators notice that one of them IS the selected card thinking that the magician has already failed. However, after turning the 3 cards face down, the magician triumphantly produces the chosen card from the pack, the card which was down on the table changed to an indifferent one.

The first known version of this plot was published as The Partagas Sell in Farelli's Card Magic Part Two, which was developed by Senor Partagas, a magic shop owner in Barcelona, Spain.

It's been said that Charlie Miller named it Dunbury after the Dumbarton Bridge that crosses San Francisco Bay.

Versions

Videos

  • Easy to Master Card Miracles, Vol. 4 by Michael Ammar.

References