- #Favorite ticks mind magic david berglas magic cafe manual
- #Favorite ticks mind magic david berglas magic cafe code
□ Seven Modest Miracles You Can Do by Barrie Richardson □ Second to None Illustrations by Simon Lovell □ Royal Road to Card Magic by Jean Hugard & Frederick Braue □ Revolutionary Card Technique by Ed Marlo □ Professional's Guide to Fire Eating by Brian Brushwood □ Practical Mental Magic by Theo Annemann □ Pack Up Your Cards Vol 1 by Paul Gordon □ Now You See It, Now You Don't! by Bill Tarr □ Neo Classics by Stephen Minch & Larry Jennings □ My Best Self-Working Card Tricks by Karl Fulves □ Miracle_Mongers_and_Their_Methods by Houdini □ Mind Reading Tricks Vol 1 by Magic Seduction □ Mental Bargain Effects by Theodor Annemann □ Memories Are Made Of This by Simon Aronson □ Mastered Amazement by Al Koran & Jack Lamonte
#Favorite ticks mind magic david berglas magic cafe manual
□ Master Mentalism Manual by Ryan Even & JP Jacquard □ Magical Rope Ties and Escapes by Houdini □ Magic Modeling Language by Aldo Stockman □ Lost Cheesy Notebooks Vol 2 by Chad Long □ Lecture Notes (Blackpool 2007) by Ian Roland □ It must be Mindreading by George Anderson □ Expert Card Technique by Jean Hugard & Frederick Braue □ Encyclopedic Dictionary of Mentalism 3 by Burling Hull □ Encyclopedic Dictionary Of Mentalism 2 by Burling Hull □ Encyclopedic Dictionary of Mentalism 1 by Burling Hull □ Encyclopedic Dictionary of Magic by Barton Whaley □ Encyclopedia of Card tricks by Jean Hugard □ Encyclopedia of Card Flourishes by Jerry Cestkowski □ Conjurers Psychological Secrets by S H Sharpe □ Conjurers Optical Secrets by S H Sharpe □ Concepts And Deceptions by Barrie Richardson □ Complete Roy Walton Vol 2 by Roy Walton □ Complete Roy Walton Vol.1 by Roy Walton □ Classical Foursome by Ed Marlo & Jon Racherbaumer □ Card Manipulations Vol 5 by Jean Hugard □ Card Manipulations Vol 4 by Jean Hugard □ Card Manipulations Vol 3 by Jean Hugard □ Card Manipulations Vol 2 by Jean Hugard □ Card Manipulations Vol 1 by Jean Hugard □ Artful Dodges of Eddie Fields by Jon Racherbaumer □ Age Illusuions and Scientific Diversions by Albert Allis Hopkins □ A Professional's Guide to Fire Eating by Brian Brushwood □ A Boon For All Seasons by Barrie Richardson □ 202 Methods of forcing by Theo Annemann □ Basic Technique For Tearing A Card In Half □ Boost your magic marketing by Andrew Mayne □ Impromptu Packet Tricks by Aldo Columbini And right off, let me say that I don't post this to impress you, I post this to show you what an addiction can do, and how overwhelming it is for me to find direction. I said somewhere else on this board, I would give you the scope of what I am working with. I posted my cards, so let's post my library. Older decks also won't have a cellophane wrapper - the company instead wrapped the cards inside the box with vellum sheets, sealing the paper with a wax seal of the company logo. It was also around the 1980s that USPC began printing UPC barcodes on the boxes. After that, sticker seals were used - and you can sometimes make some conclusions based on the color of the seal, whether the white border has become transparent with age, etc. From 1965 into sometime around the early 1980s, they used the company "Spade" stamp, complete with perforations on the edges. For example, a tax stamp marked "1 PACK" would give it a manufacture date between 19. When dating your cards, take everything into account - what kind of deck seal was used, the approximate age based on the cards' condition (even unopened decks from many years back will have a small amount of yellowing to them) as well as that of the box (and cellophane, if it is so wrapped), etc. There's more on that subject in the "Fact or Fiction" topic at the top of the Playing Card Plethora board.
#Favorite ticks mind magic david berglas magic cafe code
Other than that, yes, you would have to use the Ace of Spades letter code to get an approximate date of manufacture. The Dan and Dave version has their logo, embossing and a 2012 copyright - they were probably printed in 2012 but not cut and shipped until early 2013. I could be wrong since I don't have a deck in front of me to look at, but I believe the 2009 reprint edition had all the copyright information on the bottom, including the year and city of manufacture.