This article contains a list of magic tricks. In magic literature, tricks are often called effects. Based on published literature and marketed effects, there are millions of effects; a short performance routine by a single magician may contain dozens of such effects.
Some students of magic strive to refer to effects using a proper name, and also to properly attribute an effect to its creator. For example, consider an effect in which a magician shows four aces, and then the aces turn face up one at a time in a mysterious fashion. This effect, recognized as Twisting the Aces, is attributed to Dai Vernon, and it is based on a false count invented by Alex Elmsley. Some tricks are listed merely with their marketed name (particularly those sold as stand-alone tricks by retail dealers), whereas others are listed by the name given within magic publications.
Magic tricks
- Assistant's Revenge
- Aztec Lady
- Battle of the Barrels
- Bill in Lemon
- Book test
- Bullet Catch
- Cabinet Escape
- Chinese Linking Rings
- Chinese Water Torture Cell
- Cut and Restore Rope Trick
- David Copperfield's Laser Illusion
- Dove Pan
- Devil's Torture Chamber
- Dismemberment
- Drill of Death
- Guillotine
- Impalement
- Indian Rope Trick
- Inexhaustible bottle
- Several varieties of Levitation
- Miser's Dream
- Metamorphosis
- Needle-through-arm
- Origami
- Predicament Escape
- Quick-change
- Radium Girl
- Sands of the Nile
- Several variations of Sawing a Woman in Half, including the Zig Zag Girl and Mismade Girl
- Squeeze Box (as created by André Kole)
- Table of Death
- Thumper (magic trick)
- Wringer
Close-up effects
- Ambitious Card
- Blackstone's Card Trick Without Cards
- Card Warp
- Chink-a-chink
- The Circus Card Trick
- Cups and Balls
- Detachable Thumb
- Floating Match on Card
- French Drop (The Tourniquet)
- Glorpy
- Healed and Sealed
- Hot Foil Trick
- Hummer Card
- Needle Through Thumb
- Retention of Vision Vanish (Pinch Vanish)
- Scotch and Soda
- Snapper (puzzle)
- The Best Coin Fold
- The Four Burglars
- Three Card Monte
- Zarrow Shuffle
Levitations
Utilities/accessories
Thousands of devices are used by magicians to accomplish their effects. However, most of the devices are never even seen by the audience during the performance of the trick(s). While not generally tricks themselves, some of these devices are very valuable to performers of magic.
- Topit
- A.R. mini-stage[1]
- Funkenring[2]
- Gibeciere
- Business card production wallet[3]
- ITR (invented by James George)[4]
- Surya's Device Pro (invented by Surya Kumar and James George)[5]
- Thumb tip
- Victorian ring box or Lippincott Box is used for storing small items such as coins that have been marked by a participant in an illusion and later appear inside the locked box
See also
References
- ↑ "Hocus Pocus Parade". The Linking Ring. The International Brotherhood of Magicians. ?? (?): ?. n.d.
- ↑ Reeder, Brad; Robinson, Bill (1986). Sparks: The Funkenring Book. Coastal Magic.
- ↑ "Hocus in Focus". The Linking Ring. The International Brotherhood of Magicians. 80 (2): 111, 112. February 2000.
- ↑ Easy to Master Thread Miracles by Michael Ammar.
- ↑ Miracles DVD