everyone knows the invisible pass, turnover and the riffle pass but what about all the other cool ones. i know only bout 5 but i was wondering what other passes there are
I love the top card cover pass. I believe it's taught in Jennings' book. It's probably the only trully invisible pass where you don't need movement to cover the action. The sleight covers itself. I hate how hyped up the pass has gotton since Ellusionist released its dvds. The pass in my opinion isn't much of an important sleight. Instead of trying to learn all these complicated moves, you should try to master the basics like the double lift. Another problem I have with the pass is that people use it for tricks like the ambitious card where they only need to control one card. The beauty of the pass is that you are cutting the entire deck. There are countless ways of controlling one card invisibly without a pass.
Alex
Which one card pass are you talking about? Are you sure its a pass?Very good point. The only time I'll use a pass is for an ACR routine, but I don't really go for those kinds of things anymore.
Recently, the only kind of pass I use is the one card pass which controls the selected card to the bottom instead of the top leaving the whole deck the same position as it was.
Wow great post!!! You sure are a pass expert. BTW is Lepaul's card book worth getting?There are ALOT of versions on the pass, but short, there is the classic and Hermann, and other types ( tabled, Elliot, Wrist Turns .. etc )
Classic pass is the oldest, however the because its the hardest to pull off invisibly ( though its possible, read further ), cardmen along the years tried to make out variations and covers to do it. Houdini is said to have a very good pass, which uses the *rock*, which you see alot these days ( pack goes up and down ).
Cover pass is one good cover ( I know 3 versions personally ), along with the Dribble pass because it covers the action with a larger action. The Riffle pass became a favorite among pass users but its RARELY done well. The riffle pass itself has alot of variations, Peter Duffie's does it the best, along with the late Derek Dingle, Richard Kaufman and Ken Krenzel ( who is the fastest alive doing the pass, in his video he said he once reached the 120 pass/minute, thats 2 passes in a second, different breaks by the way ). Luke Jermey has a very nice version as well in his pengiun magic download ( will review it in the reviews forum ).
Classic pass versions include also the Braue Pass ( wierd version in Expert Card Technqiue ), Jiggle Pass ( *jigging* the deck .. can't put it in other words, haha ) and Half a Jiggle ( by Kaufman, squaring the deck in a flourishy way ) The Jig ( improvment on jiggle pass by Gary Ouellet ), and the special type of the classic pass called the Elliot Pass ( by Dr.Elliot ), along with Krenzel's version of it called K-E Pass ( in Krenzel's book written by Harry Lorayne or in Krenzel's Pass video ), and R. Paul Wilson's of it called West Coast Pass ( in his website www.rpaulwilson.com ), all are doing the classic pass is a very special way. The clasic pass is a very useful false cut too.
Living masters of the classic pass include Bill Klush ( squaring up the deck, no movment ), Ken Krenzel ( riffle passs ), Richard Kaufman ( riffle pass ), Roy Wolten is rumored to have a darn good pass along with Jerry Sowartz and Peter Duffie, also from what I've seen, Luke Jermey has a darn good pass as well. Akira Fuji is well known for his pass too online.
Thats for the classic. The Hermann passes are two types, turnovers and none-turnovers. Turnover passes include the normal one by Hermann, and its versions ( Expert Card Technique, Dr. Daley's version in Stars of Magic book ). Hugard and Braue published the first booklet ever devised for a single sleight in magic, called The Invisible Pass, which is a version on the Hermann pass that is very good ( my favorite ), it featured a new mechanic to transpose the packets, which later being used by many cardmen.
None-Turnover Hermann passes include the Malone Shift by Bill Malone ( Steve Drauns book Secrets Draun from UnderGround ), Midnight Shift by Steve Draun ( explained correctly in Steve Draun's book ), Graveyard shift ( Bill Malone ), Back Stage Pass by Joel Givens ( different from Gregory Wilson's pass, keep that in mind ), and A.Fisher's Outjogged Herrman pass, Ortiz Shift by Darwin Ortiz ( although you show the bottom card here in a natural gesture, it also offers better angles to the left, which is the weak spot of all Hermanns ), Spread Pass by Lepaul, and Gary Ouellet's The Paradigm shift ( improvment on the Braue Invisible Pass, I think I got the correct spelling .. ). Also, there are 2 cover pass, one with the bottom card ( Richard Kaufman ) and one with the top card ( I have no idea who invented it .. ).
Thats for the Hermann passes, there are other types of passes ( that is, other ways of transposing the packets ), including the Fingerpalm pass ( Expert Card Techinque ), Tabled passes ( uses in cheating, there are ALOT of versions in this area ) and Wrist Turn Passes ( Ed Marlo's work on this is HUGE ), SideSweep Pass ( Kaufman's CardMagic book ) Chariler Pass ( which can be done invisibly, Ed Marlo has a technique ), a Lee Asher pass ( "2nd fastest pass in the world" is the name? ), Jeff Wessmiller Pass ( tabled pass .. ) and Side Steal Pass ( Gary Ouellet ). Not to mention Erdnase's special passes like S.W.E Shift and Open Shift.
Whew, that was a long post, haha. Hope this helps. These info are gatherd from Krenzel's video on the pass and Gary Ouellet's book on it. Of course, if you want to learn the pass get the proper resource, this post is just to show you how many versions of the pass are there, and some names of the fomous ones.
After all this, my favorite pass would be Braue's Invisible pass, Ortiz Shift, my own pass and Luke Jermey's.
Wow great post!!! You sure are a pass expert. BTW is Lepaul's card book worth getting?
The answer is yes. There is alot of invaluble information in there and it is illustrated w/over 300 photos. The chapter that deals with the DL (two versions) is worth the price alone for the book and I still use the first version today. Paul Lepaul's book was a main staple in my early studies of Card SOH. I still open that book often. "Gymnastic Aces" is a favorite trick of mine that incorporates a multiple shift and a faro. It's still a slayer.Wow great post!!! You sure are a pass expert. BTW is Lepaul's card book worth getting?