* [[Charles Jordan|JORDAN, Charles]] - '''Reversed Cards'''. Instruction sheet published between 1916 and 1920, reprinted in [[Encyclopedia of Card Tricks]], page 393 (1937) and in [[Charles Jordan's Best Card Tricks]], page 66, compiled by [[Karl Fulves]] in 1992.
* [[Sid Lorraine]] '''The S.L. Reversed Card''', page 34 in [[Subtle Problems You Will Do]] (1937) written by [[John Braun]] and [[Stewart Judah]]. An in-the-hands version of Triumph
* [[Ed Marlo|MARLO, Ed]] - '''Marlo's Triumph''', page 46 in [[Marlo in Spades]] (1947). A Triumph without a Strip-out Shuffle.
* [[Milton Kort|KORT, Milt]] - '''A Kortial Triumph''', published in [[Milton Kort Lecture Notes]] (1963)
* [[Daryl|DARYL]] - '''The Puerto Rican Triumph''', incorporates a convincing tabled cutting-sequence known as the Puerto Rican Cutting Display that was quickly adopted by many top pros upon its publication in [[Secrets of a Puerto Rican Gambler]] ([[Stephen Minch|Minch, 1980]]).
* [[Bob Farmer|FARMER, Bob]] - '''Double Dazzling Slop Shuffle Triumph''', [[Fork Full of Appetizers, Book 1]] (1982)
== Related Notes ==
== Related Notes ==
Revision as of 13:24, 16 September 2009
Triumph is a reversing-card routine developed by Dai Vernon that was first published in Stars of Magic, Series 2, No. 1 (1946) in which a card is selected and returned to the pack, whereupon half the deck is turned face up and shuffled into the face-down half. The deck then magically rights itself, except for the selected card.
Dai developed the Triumph Shuffle to accomplish this effect, which is a type of Strip-out Shuffle.
DARYL - The Puerto Rican Triumph, incorporates a convincing tabled cutting-sequence known as the Puerto Rican Cutting Display that was quickly adopted by many top pros upon its publication in Secrets of a Puerto Rican Gambler (Minch, 1980).