Coin magic
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coin magic is a general term for feats of conjuring, employing one or more coins which are manipulated to deceive and baffle the audience.[1] Because it is focused on physically small objects, much of coin magic is classed as close-up magic or table magic, as the audience must be close to the performer to see the effects. Though stage conjurers generally do not use coin effects, they must use a large video projector to do close-up magic. Coin magic is generally considered harder to master than other close-up techniques such as card magic, and is one of the least performed forms of conjuring. Coin magic requires great skill and grace to perform convincingly, and this takes a lot of practice to acquire.
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[edit] Why coins?
Coin magic is highly respected among magicians, and is well received among all audiences and all ages. Illusions with coins often have a significant impact on the spectator because coins are such common objects, people handle them every day, and they will tend to have less suspicion that the coin is gimmicked. As such, coin magic easily allows for the two qualities that make up ideal magic effects: interaction with the audience combined with startling visual illusions. Coins are also power symbols, and this allows people to feel more of a connection to the illusion, especially when the illusion is performed with a borrowed coin. Conjurers like to have in their repertoire some effects which can be performed with any common coin, as these can be shown impromptu, on demand, in the street, in a bar, or at a social occasion, without the need to carry any magic props in case the opportunity comes to give entertainment. Such spontaneous performances often have a strong impact.
[edit] The basic elements of coin magic
Coin effects include productions, vanishes, transformations, transpositions, teleportations, penetrations, restorations, levitations and mental magic — some are combined in a single routine. A simple effect might involve borrowing a coin, making it vanish, palming it for a time, then producing it again unexpectedly, and returning it to the owner. More complex effects may involve multiple coins, substituting or switching coins, and manipulating other objects (e.g. handkerchiefs, glasses) as well as the coins. However, the power of most coin magic lies in its simplicity and the solidity of the object; the basic skills of sleight of hand and misdirection often appear most magical without complex equipment. Almost any audience will be amazed by the simplest mystery, such as passing a coin through a table. There is even a way magicians can flip a coin and have it land on the side they want; even without using the double-faced coin -- a coin which has a head on both sides. This coin flip sleight was invented by two people separately: Jereme Kennington and Tony Miller. It is hard to say who came out with it first.
[edit] Sleights and tricks
Some famous coin sleights and routines include:
- Miser's Dream - Grabbing coin after coin from thin air.
- French drop - A grabbing coin vanish.
- Coins Across - Coin after coin teleportation.
- The Muscle Pass - Making a coin fall up from your hand.
- Controlled Flip - Making a coin land on a specific side.
- Palming - A form of concealment.
- Sleeving - A form of concealment.
- Lapping - A form of concealment/ditching.
- Shadow Coins - Chink-a-Chink using coins (a coin assembly with bare hands). [2]
- Matrix - A coin assembly using cards.
- Coin snatching - A trick in which one snatches a coin in such a way that the coin seems to have teleported with a bang. [3]
[edit] Coin magicians
Some magicians widely known for coin magic include:
- Thomas Nelson Downs (The King of Koins)
- David Roth
- Michael Rubinstein
- Larry Jennings
- Dean Dill
- Michael Ammar
- J.B. Bobo
- Troy Hooser
- Shoot Ogawa
- Apollo Robbins
- Armando Lucero
[edit] Performance
Although some coin magic depends on a gimmick (e.g. a coin box, coin shell, coins stuck together, oversized coins, folding coins), such gimmicks do not entirely automate the magical effect. Producing a memorable mystery requires significant skill in presenting the effect, delivering the patter, distracting the audience from the secret of the gimmick, and manipulating the equipment without arousing suspicion about the true method of operation. A performer who relies entirely on special equipment may not impress an audience. Many people are more impressed by an effect which depends (or seems to depend) entirely on skillful manipulation and misdirection than by an effect which appears to depend to some extent on specially made props. A performer who has mastered the basic skills can nonetheless use gimmicks in one's routine to good effect without it being obvious to the audience.
[edit] Getting started
Magic stores often sell coin gimmicks with the implication that no practice is needed to dazzle an audience. In fact, whether an effect depends on a gimmick or not, a lot of practice is always needed to make it seem like magic. Those interested in learning to perform coin magic should go to a magic shop or magic store online and buy a magic video or book. The curious coin magician could also ask a local magician for help in pursuing the art. Another way is to subscribe to a magic magazine such as Genii or Magic. Finally, you could join a magic organization such as the Society of American Magicians (S.A.M.) or International Brotherhood of Magicians (I.B.M.) which include magic clubs called circles or rings. Go to their official website to check for a ring location near you.
[edit] Coin magic in literature
Canadian novelist Robertson Davies devotes a good part of his Deptford Trilogy to the art of coin magic. All three novels follow in part or wholly the career of a fictitious magician, Magnus Eisengrim, who was abducted as a boy by a traveling circus and learned his craft while concealed in a papier-mâché automaton. The descriptions of coin magic throughout are remarkable for their clarity. The final novel in the series in particular World of Wonders details his life and career, and is considered by many to be one of the best literary depictions of a coin magic virtuoso.
In the Neil Gaiman novel American Gods, the main character, Shadow, is an experienced coin magician, and many different tricks and aspects of coin magic are discussed in the book.
In the Dean Koontz novel From the Corner of His Eye, a police officer uses coin magic to interrogate suspects.
Thieves, wizards, and jesters, in historical and fantasy literature are often depicted as being skilled in legerdemain, and are often depicted doing standard coin magic. Rolling a coin across the knuckles is a popular image. Silk in David Eddings's Belgariad, and Mat Cauthon and Thom Merrilin in Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time, do this frequently. Also, Vila Restal in the BBC science fiction television program Blake's 7 mixed his skills as a thief with such tricks.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Wilson, Mark [1975] (1988). Mark Wilson's Complete Course In Magic. Courage Books. ISBN 0894716239.Money Magic, pp. 175-221.
- ^ Chink-a-Chink is the formal description of the sleight which transports separate objects to assemble in a pile. It can be used with other objects such as dice, bottle caps, sugar cubes, and many other items.
- ^ Can be done with multiple coins.