The Dime And Penny (Lloyd E. Jones) 2nd Edition 1946

$20.00

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Description

Note: Second edition, 1946. Soft covers, staple bound, 20 pages. Good pre-owned condition.

Twenty-five excellent tricks are concisely explained by Lloyd E. Jones for this excellent piece of mechanical coin magic. Nicely illustrated, too. The Dime and Penny ebook makes an old trick modern and definitely establishes it as one of the classics of magic.

No difficult sleights are required, no bulky apparatus, every move is described. You’ll deceive your friends for days on end with the excellent magic effects possible with this one piece of mechanical magic. It’s doubtful that any book devoted to a single pocket trick has ever featured such good magic as is given in this book.

Many of you have a Dime and Penny effect in your magic tricks stash, yet you’ve either lost the instructions for it, or perhaps bought it at auction and didn’t receive any directions in the first place. Now you can put this effect to work for you to entertain a new generation of audiences.

Contents Include:

Introduction
How to Take it Apart
Taking Care of the Coin(s)
Snugness, Looseness
Appearance
The Basic Vanish
Matter Through Matter
Matter Through Spectator
The Sixteen Cent Trick
Forty-One Cent Trick
A Quick Vanish
The Eleven Cent Trick
Fadeaway Coin
Fadeaway Follow-up
Penny-Tration
Glass-Go
Thank You, Friend!
Data on Dates
Street Car Misadventure
Black Market
Mint-Flavored
To Market to Market
I Don’t Believe It!
Reverse English
Believe It or Not
Passe-Passe Coins
Harum-Scarum
The Teetotaler Coin
The Traveling Coin
Allez Oop!
A Final Word of Advice
About the Author

“Valuable information for the close-up or table worker.” – John Braun

“Very valuable … may be used by amateurs as well as professionals. Worth the price and more.” – Julian J. Proskauer

“All the effects are superb for close-up work and none are difficult. Well illustrated and clearly written, this book will add excellent effects to any magician’s close-up reputation.” – John Mulholland

“Good reading.” – George Johnson