Talk:Scotch and soda (magic trick)

Latest comment: 16 years ago by TenOfAllTrades in topic Method removed

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This is so horribly written it's still 'magical' to me! Jachin 09:04, 23 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

Method removed

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I have removed the method from the article as it is unsourced. This is following the guidelines laid out in Wikipedia:WikiProject_Magic#Magic_Methods_and_Exposure. If the method can be properly sourced, then it can be re-added. StephenBuxton (talk) 16:37, 10 April 2008 (UTC)Reply

NB: The material was removed in this diff and contained the following information:


/==Method==

The gimmicks used in Scotch and Soda are a hollow coin shell made from the silver coin, and a half-copper/half-silver coin that can fit snugly inside the shell. From its obverse side, the silver coin shell looks normal. From one side, the half-and-half coin looks like the obverse side of the copper coin; from the other, it looks like the reverse side of the silver coin.

At the start of the trick, the shell conceals the quarter that will appear later. The half-and-half coin is only displayed from its copper side and the shell is, obviously, only displayed from the top. The magician must be careful to not show the underside of either of the gaffed coins. When the magician stacks the coins to give to the spectator, he actually slides the half-and-half coin in between the shell and the quarter, squeezing the two gimmicks together, thus forming one solid silver "coin" with the quarter beneath. Once the coins are in the spectator's hands, the magician's work is over. All he must do is ask the spectator to open his hands.

An authentic copper coin that matches the gimmick from the trick can be planted by the magician before the trick begins to be "discovered" later as the missing coin. To reset the trick, the magician must use a special tool to separate the gimmicks: A small ring shaped object that when banged against a hard surface will allow only the half copper/half silver coin through.


Editors are encouraged to restore the material when they find appropriate sources, or to restore the content if the original removal of the material was in error, and to correct any errors in the method described. TenOfAllTrades(talk) 21:24, 11 April 2008 (UTC)Reply