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Endless Chain: Difference between revisions
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[[Endless Chain]] (also known as [[Pricking the Garter]], Chain of Chance and Loopy Loop) is a gambling scam. A string | [[Endless Chain]] (also known as [[Pricking the Garter]], Chain of Chance and Loopy Loop) is a gambling scam. A loop of string or chain (sometimes a necklace) is laid upon a table in a figure-8 pattern. The spectator is shown that if a finger is placed in one side of the figure 8 and the chain is pulled, the chain will come free, but the other side catches on the finger. The spectator is instructed to pick a side that will catch the chain, but fails every time. | ||
This is a very old scam. It was published as a magic effect in | This is a very old scam. It was published as a magic effect in [[Stanyon's Magic]] in 1901 and later popularized [[George Blake]] in 1949 when he published it as "Loopy Loop". | ||
== Books == | == Routines in Books == | ||
* [[The Loopy Loop - A Treatise on the Endless Chain]] by George Blake (1949) | * [[The Loopy Loop - A Treatise on the Endless Chain]] by George Blake (1949) | ||
* [[Ken Brooke and Friends]], page 95 ''The Endless Chain'' written by Derek Lever (1986). | * [[A Ray of Magic]], by [[Jimmy Ray]], ''The Magic Figure 8'' (1980) | ||
* [[Ken Brooke and Friends]], page 95, ''The Endless Chain'' written by Derek Lever (1986). | |||
==Routines on DVD== | |||
* [[The Chain Gang]], by Marc DeSouza ([[Camirand Academy of Magic]]) | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
Revision as of 17:17, 15 January 2010
Endless Chain (also known as Pricking the Garter, Chain of Chance and Loopy Loop) is a gambling scam. A loop of string or chain (sometimes a necklace) is laid upon a table in a figure-8 pattern. The spectator is shown that if a finger is placed in one side of the figure 8 and the chain is pulled, the chain will come free, but the other side catches on the finger. The spectator is instructed to pick a side that will catch the chain, but fails every time.
This is a very old scam. It was published as a magic effect in Stanyon's Magic in 1901 and later popularized George Blake in 1949 when he published it as "Loopy Loop".
Routines in Books
- The Loopy Loop - A Treatise on the Endless Chain by George Blake (1949)
- A Ray of Magic, by Jimmy Ray, The Magic Figure 8 (1980)
- Ken Brooke and Friends, page 95, The Endless Chain written by Derek Lever (1986).
Routines on DVD
- The Chain Gang, by Marc DeSouza (Camirand Academy of Magic)