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I've learnt a lot from sleight of hand, and in this video I break down five techniques I use all the time, and a lesson I've learnt from each one. Let me know what moves would make your top 5 below! WHERE TO LEARN THESE MOVES: Lift Shuffle: A very basic tutorial for the move can be found here: • How to Do an Overhand Lift Shuffle | Magic... If you want to learn the technique properly, as well as learn some other applications for this technique, I highly recommend getting Card College by Roberto Giobbi. You'll find the lift shuffle on page 257 of Volume 2. Spread Cull: You can learn it here: • Hofzinser Spread Cull CARD CONTROL Tutorial but once again I recommend learning it from Card College (Volume 1 page 187) Classic Pass: Alex Pandrea has a good tutorial which you can find here: • The CLASSIC PASS Tutorial - The Ultimate G... One of sources that helped me the most was Andrew Frost's membership, where he teaches some very helpful subtleties. You can subscribe to that here: / sleightlyobsessed Top Change: You can learn the move here: • The BEST Card Switch EVER - TOP CHANGE (Tu... I also highly recommend looking at some of Ben Earl's thoughts on the top change, which you can find in New Theory Switching (https://studio52magic.com/collections...) or in the Technical Masterclass on the move in his membership (https://studio52magic.com/products/th...) Top Palm: A very basic tutorial can be found here: • Vernon Top Palm Tutorial [HD] but I highly recommend John Galsworthy's lecture/download The Expert Palming Session where he breaks down a great method as well as several other useful techniques. You can find that here: https://www.vanishingincmagic.com/car... ----------------------------- CREDITS AND SOURCES: An early version of the lift shuffle is found in The Expert at the Card Table by S. W. Erdnase (p. 163). This version is similar to a modern day chop shuffle, and maintained the entire order of the deck. The lift shuffle as I described in this video seems to be first published in Card Manipulations Volume 5 (p. 143) but I have not been able to check. The spread cull was first discovered by Johann Hofzinser in the mid-1800s, which expanded upon an earlier idea written in an unpublished notebook from an anonymous author. The seed of this move was to cull the bottom card of the deck as it was spread in order to force it, and Hofzinser turned that mechanic into a control from anywhere in the deck. Many versions and applications have been created since then. I will enclose a quote from Conjuring Credits that describes the origin of the classic pass as we know it: "There is evidence to suggest that the two-handed Pass -– or a related move -– has been in use much longer than the first detailed instructions would suggest, and even then only in card cheating contexts rather than as a conjuring technique. The first description to explain the mechanics of the move appears in Gabriel Mailhol's Le Philosophe Nègre et Les Secrets des Grecs, Vol. 2, 1764, pp. 65-6. The workings of the move are woven into a story between an experienced sharper named Dioméde and the narrator. Dioméde explains how the narrator was cheated with the “pivot cut” (Pass). The earliest instruction in the context of conjuring appears in Edme-Gilles Guyot's Nouvelles Recreations Physiques et Mathematiques, 1769, p. 1 of the Hugard translation (unpublished)." Once again I will quote Conjuring Credits, this time for the origin of the top change, because it credits the move far more eloquently than I can: "This technique appeared in an unpublished notebook circa 1800. Will Houstoun transcribed the anonymous book and published it as The Notebook, 2009, p. 29. No technical details about finger grips are mentioned. It later hit the published page in Jean-Nicholas Ponsin's Nouvelle Magie Blanche Dévoilée, 1853, p. 37. This early description already has the modern finger grips in use, with the right hand's card both starting and ending between the right index finger and thumb." The top palm was first described on page 109 of Testament de Jérôme Sharp, which was published in 1786. There are two top palms that I used in this video, Topping the Deck which was published by Dai Vernon in Select Secrets (1941), and the CS Top Palm which is an unpublished technique that I have independently discovered. ----------------------------- 00:00 Intro 00:34 Move 1 01:11 Lesson 1: Develop Muscle Memory 02:35 Move 2 03:04 Lesson 2: It's Not An Out, It's An Outcome 04:33 Move 3 05:54 Lesson 3: All Good Moves Take Time 06:51 Move 4 07:22 Lesson 4: Look Up 09:51 Move 5 11:00 Lesson 5: Cover Your Bases 13:56 Outro