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Nomen Omen: Difference between revisions
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[[Nomen Omen]] is an application for [[Ralph W. Hull]]'s [[Pop Eyed Popper Deck]] created by [[David Acer]] and released by [[The Camirand Academy of Magic]] in 1990 with a photo-illustrated instruction booklet written by [[Gary Ouellet]]. A deck is introduced with the name of a person written on the back of every card. Two cards are then freely chosen and prove to match two predictions made by the magician, one predicting a chosen card, the other a chosen name. | [[Nomen Omen]] is an application for [[Ralph W. Hull]]'s [[Pop Eyed Popper Deck]] created by [[David Acer]] and released by [[The Camirand Academy of Magic]] in 1990 with a photo-illustrated instruction booklet written by [[Gary Ouellet]]. A deck is introduced with the name of a person written on the back of every card. Two cards are then freely chosen and prove to match two predictions made by the magician, one predicting a chosen card, the other a chosen name. | ||
Revision as of 14:00, 22 April 2010
Nomen Omen is an application for Ralph W. Hull's Pop Eyed Popper Deck created by David Acer and released by The Camirand Academy of Magic in 1990 with a photo-illustrated instruction booklet written by Gary Ouellet. A deck is introduced with the name of a person written on the back of every card. Two cards are then freely chosen and prove to match two predictions made by the magician, one predicting a chosen card, the other a chosen name.
In Smoke and Mirrors (1991), John Bannon credits Nomen Omen as the inspiration for his name-deck trick, DeTour de Force.