Help us get to over 8,749 articles in 2024.

If you know of a magician not listed in MagicPedia, start a New Biography for them. Contact us at magicpediahelp@gmail.com

Difference between revisions of "Appearing Cane"

From Magicpedia, the free online encyclopedia for magicians by magicians.
Jump to: navigation, search
m
m
 
Line 2: Line 2:
  
  
Russ Walsh marketed his "Walsh's Appearing Cane" in 1947. However, it shows up in W.H.J. Shaw's "Magic and Its Mysteries", 1893, p. 59, as the "Entirely New Handkerchief to Snake" in which a stick is covered with cloth to give it the appearance of a snake, but it's virtually the same as the Appearing Cane.<ref>http://www.conjuringcredits.com/doku.php?id=cane:appearing_cane</ref>
+
Russ Walsh marketed his "Walsh's Appearing Cane" in 1947. However, it shows up in W.H.J. Shaw's "Magic and Its Mysteries", 1893, p. 59, as the "Entirely New Handkerchief to Snake" in which a stick is covered with cloth to give it the appearance of a snake, but it's virtually the same as the Appearing Cane.<ref>{{cc|cane:appearing_cane}}</ref>
  
 
Variations have been created by [[Fantasio]].
 
Variations have been created by [[Fantasio]].

Latest revision as of 20:38, 3 August 2014

Appearing Cane is an effect, usually credited to Russell Walsh in 1947, in which a cane or walking-stick is produced by the magician out of thin air.


Russ Walsh marketed his "Walsh's Appearing Cane" in 1947. However, it shows up in W.H.J. Shaw's "Magic and Its Mysteries", 1893, p. 59, as the "Entirely New Handkerchief to Snake" in which a stick is covered with cloth to give it the appearance of a snake, but it's virtually the same as the Appearing Cane.[1]

Variations have been created by Fantasio.

See also Vanishing Cane.

References

  1. Conjuring Credits' article on cane:appearing_cane