Anyone else totally floored when they bought S.W.E Shift?

Sep 1, 2007
1,572
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Leicester, UK
www.youtube.com
It's from Erdnase, did you expect it to be easy?

Here's an idea, instead of being smarmy and immediately coming to the conclusion he's complaining about how difficult it is, you actually take the time to read his post. :rolleyes:

Yes, James. I took another look at it after the 1on1 came out and it is an amazing sleight, Erdnase (whoever he/she was) was indeed an incredible thinker.

This is what I love about sleight of hand card magic, the actual creation and thinking process, some controls and shifts these days are incredibly well thought out and I'd love to be inside the head of the creator when they thought of it. :)

It's a shame Erdnase isn't here today to tell their story of how this fantastic shift came about.

- Sean
 
Mar 4, 2008
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Here's an idea, instead of being smarmy and immediately coming to the conclusion he's complaining about how difficult it is, you actually take the time to read his post. :rolleyes:

Yes, James. I took another look at it after the 1on1 came out and it is an amazing sleight, Erdnase (whoever he/she was) was indeed an incredible thinker.

This is what I love about sleight of hand card magic, the actual creation and thinking process, some controls and shifts these days are incredibly well thought out and I'd love to be inside the head of the creator when they thought of it. :)

It's a shame Erdnase isn't here today to tell their story of how this fantastic shift came about.

- Sean

S.W Erdnase was a man named E.S Andrews. There is his life story in front of The Expert at the Card Table.
 
Jun 24, 2008
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Thanks for sticking up for me Sean_Raf, you and I seem to see eye to eye on quite a few issues. I personally see alot of beauty in the way these things are structured. For instance, I would love to invent something as creative as ,say, The Twinsplit Remix by Dan and Dave Buck. I cant imagine how one might come up with such an idea, I definitley aspire to do something like that. To be the next big thing.
 
May 24, 2008
402
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Thanks for sticking up for me Sean_Raf, you and I seem to see eye to eye on quite a few issues. I personally see alot of beauty in the way these things are structured. For instance, I would love to invent something as creative as ,say, The Twinsplit Remix by Dan and Dave Buck. I cant imagine how one might come up with such an idea, I definitley aspire to do something like that. To be the next big thing.
the trick is not to think " I am going to come up with a new pass". Just let ideas come to you.
 
Oct 28, 2007
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Is it just me or does any one else think this was a very easy sleight? yet remarkable!
 
May 1, 2008
37
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Montreal, Canada
Is it just me or does any one else think this was a very easy sleight? yet remarkable!

Well when i saw first saw the 1on1 i looked in my copy of expert at the card table and couldn't really get it so i got the 1on1 and i'm completely fooled on how much i didnt get. Well I find now after a few weeks practice it's really easy but somewhat hard to do perfectely everytime :p I love it!

Nico
 
Sep 3, 2007
38
0
S.W Erdnase was a man named E.S Andrews. There is his life story in front of The Expert at the Card Table.

E.S. Andrews is just one of the guesses at the author. The reasoning behind this is that there was a card cheat alive at the time the book was originally written by the name of E.S. Andrews.

There are other speculations on who Erdnase was, one is a man named Milton Franklin Andrews, of course the reasoning behind this is the last name Andrews. He was a con-man and card cheat living at the time the book was written also. The Flaw to this theory is that Milton Franklin Andrews was not known to be a well educated person. And, just reading the book you can tell the author is very well educated.

Wilbur Edgerton Sanders is also a guess at the author of the book. W.E. Sanders is an anagram of S.W. Erdnase.
 
Nov 20, 2007
4,410
6
Sydney, Australia
Never say impossible, you don't know until you try.
Also you should see Steve Freeman do it.... wow...

Or yours... If your S.W.E Shift didn't inspire me so much, I'd probably have quit magic after seeing it... -.-'

It'd be good to see some videos of it in performance situations, for the people saying it's now easy...

And yeah James, I totally agree with you about the creation of sleights like this... This and some routines you see, you gotta wonder how on earth someone actually thought of the principle...
 
Sep 2, 2007
1,186
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42
London
Or yours... If your S.W.E Shift didn't inspire me so much, I'd probably have quit magic after seeing it... -.-'

It'd be good to see some videos of it in performance situations, for the people saying it's now easy...

And yeah James, I totally agree with you about the creation of sleights like this... This and some routines you see, you gotta wonder how on earth someone actually thought of the principle...

I think you can kind of see the evolution of this move in Erdnase. If you look at the Two-Hand Transformation, Second Method, similar mechanics are used in the Longitudinal Shift, except the latter move shifts a whole packet rather than just one card. The SWE Shift just turns the Longitudinal Shift on its side.

The most interesting thing about Erdnase's shifts is that they use opposing tension on the upper and lower packets to make the move incredeibly quick and (when you have the finger positions right) almost automatic. I don't know anyone else who has come up with anything similar.
 
Sep 1, 2007
1,595
0
Venezuela
At first when I saw Chris Kenner do it, I thought it was just one card that moved on top, but it is a packet :O I'm practicing it, I do it, but not like Kenner, it will take yeeaarsss..
 
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