I have not only purchased to initial set I have also purchased extra final loads and extra balls as
well. Offline I have also added a 52.5 mm Snooker ball and 50 mm chrome ball bearing for final
loads. Keep in mind the size of the load and what fits entirely in the cup is secondary. There have
been acts that produce watermelons, pineapples, and bowling balls from under the cups. Final loads
are a matter of handling and not the size of the cup.
The elegant routine on the add copy
had a limited distribution and was only available during the Kickstarter campaign and is not
available for purchase. However there is no any mention of providing this routine as part of the
purchase, and I researched before purchase well aware of this. I knew in advance.
Just like
there are abundant comedy routines for the linking rings, there are fewer Dai Vernon's Symphony of
the Rings type routines. I found this to be the same situation with the Chop Cup. All of the best
tutorials I could find were comedy routines and none equal to the routine in the trailer. So be
prepared. If you are not familiar with the Chop Cup and your goal is to do a Symphony of the Chop
Cups you're in for a challenge.
I absolutely love the fact the Chop Cup looks like a
pencil holder and that was what initially drew me to this set. I thought have it stationed off to
the side with sharpies in it and then at the right moment...
I have also learned that the
performance in the demo has some proprietary moves that may not be derivative of previous handlings.
I cannot say this with absolute certainty, but I could not find any information about them anywhere.
If there is an advanced Chop Cup tutorial or reference I have not found one. Everything
useable I have found is on DVD or DRM are the routines found in 'The Classic Chop Cup' DVD from the
Teach in Sessions, (there are some advanced moves and handing techniques presented on this release)
and 'Chop Cup' (World's Greatest Magic) DVD or DRM. There is also Brad Burt's Chop Cup DVD which has
mixed reviews. Other releases appear to be watered down versions of the three I just mentioned.
I have found some custom handlings on YouTube and most are derivative of handlings
presented in the tutorials I have mentioned.
I wish I knew more about that Chop Cup and
could present more information on how to go about creating an elegant routine verses a comedic one,
but I can't. I simply do not know enough about which books and tutorials contain this information.
If you want a phenomenal chop cup routine, check Pipo Villanueva's magic for the shortsighted. It's a downloable video here on Penguin. It has 6 routines, 3 with cards, 2 with coins and the chop cup routine that it's simply brilliant.