I've been practising this move today and I found it surprisingly easy. Thanks for the tutorial. I'll definitely try it out.
@ReidFerry8 күн бұрын
It absolutely is, no problem happy to help!
@GOSen-cj2ld9 күн бұрын
What a clever idea. Thanks 😊
@ReidFerry8 күн бұрын
Thank you!!
@Aditya_6899 күн бұрын
Great explanation
@ReidFerry8 күн бұрын
Thanks!!😁
@notauser90639 күн бұрын
Who created this move? Can you credit them
@CaptainNematode9 күн бұрын
I couldn’t find it, but Daniel Madison did a half hour on it five years ago. It isn’t in royal road.
@CaptainNematode9 күн бұрын
Since it is the same concept as the convincing control, but is from the dribble with the thumb instead of the fingers from the spread, and the card ends on the top in stead of bottom, maybe you could just call it a variation on Ed Marlo, and I would be convinced.
@CaptainNematode9 күн бұрын
The moment of the draw changes also
@ReidFerry9 күн бұрын
I’ve looked all over for where this originates but same as you I had no luck. When in doubt Marlo is always a good guess!😁
@jakevaloff9 күн бұрын
LOL. I like the cut of your job, Reid. What an informative tutorial. Again, I know theres gonna be rookies complaining about the length. But get this, as someone mentioned, kind of like the convincing control, I've seen several videos that teach or touch on it, but nowhere near the expert level nuances. I think speights, by their very nature, requires nuances. It's about the little things. The big move covers the small move, but if your small move sucks... then your big move just covers a crappy sleight. The idea is to create magic for the spectator. I think I heard Michael Vincent say, dont learn 200 tricks. Learn 2, and practice them to death so you own them. And when you perform them, they are like your signature. It takes humility to self reflect and self correct. It's a journey not a destination. All of our heroes were still performing way into their golden years. Thank you!