![]() You have the coin in your right hand and pretend to take it in your left, but you actually use your thumb to slide it around your index finger and on the back of your hand where it slides into your sleeve. There is a coin vanish I do that I assume is standard, but I don't know what it's called. Rolled-up Sleeving - I know very little about coin magic - at least in comparison with things I've studied extensively like card magic or mentalism. So you could have a paint by numbers board that looks like the last supper, in its unpainted state, but when you paint it in it could be a gay orgy.Īnd that's actually the best idea I had for that concept, so I'm done with it for now. But the color designations for each square are such that when they're filled in they actually produce a picture of a banana, but you don't know that until you color in the squares (covering up the bold lines which implied an apple.) Well, you could do a similar thing with the random shapes in a paint -by-number. So you would assume when you color it in you'll have a pixelated picture of an apple. ![]() ![]() And in the grid I've kind of used bold lines to outline an apple. ![]() Does this make sense? Imagine a large grid and each number has a color it's supposed to be painted. So then when someone paints it (which obliterates the lines) they end up with an image they weren't expecting. Not only that, but if two numbers referred to the same color paint, things that are demarcated in the unpainted image would be part of a whole in the final image. But if you made it up of somewhat small segments you could then do a bolder outline around a picture that isn't really in the final image. ![]()
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