Bob White offers a great routine sharing his knowledge with us all.
The routine is great and
absolutely clean. Ass is explained in minute details.
Well done.
4 of 4 magicians found this helpful.
Bob White is a classical magician who takes each affect to another level of excellence. If you ever
wanted to do the torn and restored tissue this is the one.
4 of 5 magicians found this helpful.
Although this DVD is titled Torn and Restored "Tissue", Bob actually uses a napkin for the routine,
so that the paper tears evenly. This is a great, well thought out torn and restored effect! It is
very clean. Bob carefully explains all aspects of the routine - preparing the napkins, getting set
up, and then the actual performance. This is one of the best!!
2 of 2 magicians found this helpful.
This is good for research on this effect. He's got some good ideas and advice however, for better
scripting I youtube Steinmeyer's take on this effect & its script can be found in old Genii Issues
or in his book Conjuring Anthology too.
This is good for research on this effect. He's got some good ideas and advice however, for better
scripting I youtube Steinmeyer's take on this effect & its script can be found in old Genii Issues
or in his book Conjuring Anthology too.
Buy
0 of 1 magicians found this helpful.
I loved this one! Highly recommended
0 of 1 magicians found this helpful.
This teacher is the epitome of dullness and what can keep keen students away from learning. With all
the cliches in the book this old texan guy tears table napkins he calls 'tissues' into strips, does
a couple of finger palms, blithly telling students he's been doing this for 400 times a year since
the 1950s.
Goodby panache, audience involvement, excitement, interest, music,
mystery....instead, just an old rural texan geezer talky-talkying his way through what is, in my
view, the dullest teaching of a grimly poor magic production.
0 of 3 magicians found this helpful.
This teacher is the epitome of dullness and what can keep keen students away from learning. With all
the cliches in the book this old texan guy tears table napkins he calls 'tissues' into strips, does
a couple of finger palms, blithly telling students he's been doing this for 400 times a year since
the 1950s.
Goodby panache, audience involvement, excitement, interest, music,
mystery....instead, just an old rural texan geezer talky-talkying his way through what is, in my
view, the dullest teaching of a grimly poor magic production.
0 of 4 magicians found this helpful.