Then, allow them to fall forward as if you were trying to square the deck. Drop the cards softly so they land on the bottom half slightly injogged toward you. However, this time, instead of dropping the top packet of cards back down flush, you’re going to do something a little different.Then, perform either the Swing Cut or regular cut as mentioned in the first trick and instruct the spectator to return their card as before (photo 1).Start by using a basic card spread and having someone select a card and memorize it.That is not the case with The Amazing Rising Card, a fun and easy card trick where a spectator’s chosen card rises out of a deck of cards on its own. The problem with most “Pick a Card Any Card” tricks is that the selected card is usually revealed in boring ways. You can also build a little “magic routine” by then transitioning into a trick using the four Aces like the classic Twisting the Aces card trick which can be learned in Michael Ammar’s Easy to Master Card Miracles Volume 2. Even something silly like explaining how it’s a “magical good luck ritual” you use before every poker game will help make the trick even more interesting. Pro Tip: Try coming up with a fun story or reason to explain why your spectator is dealing the cards in such a specific way. Once they have moved three cards and dealt three cards with each pile, you can then tell them to turn over the top card of each pile to find they’ve magically found all four Aces. ![]() ![]() This process is repeated with each pile, ensuring that the Aces pile is used last.Then, have them deal one card onto the top of each of the three other piles before finally putting the pile back down. Have your spectator pick up the pile farthest from the Aces pile (the one all the way to the left in the photo above) and tell them to move three cards from the top of the pile to the bottom.Hand your spectator the cards and instruct them to cut the deck in four roughly equal piles, being sure to track where the top pile with the Aces lands (it's the packet all the way to the right in the photo below).If not, just casually turn the deck face up and show the audience that they all the cards mixed while carefully hiding the Aces from their view. If you know a false shuffle or false cut (see below in The Amazing Rising Card Trick, below), now would be a great time to use it. Before you begin, place all four Aces face down on top of the deck.From a seemingly shuffled deck of cards, your spectator will find all four Aces. This is an awesome self-working card trick where all the magic happens in your spectator’s hands (something our lead designer and professional magician Michal Kociolek is a huge fan of!).This allows you to have a bonus kicker ending where you not only find their card but manage to also find the four Aces as well. Pro Tip: If you want to take things a step further, you can make the 4 other face-down cards in your secret setup be Aces instead of random cards. They can then turn it over themselves and see that it is impossibly their selected card. Starting to the LEFT of the Five of Clubs, count Five cards and push the fifth card forward.At this point, you can explain how you actually turned over a special indicator card. They will usually see it on their own and let you know that it’s not their selected card. Don’t bring attention to the face up Five of Clubs.Make a magical gesture and explain how you’ve made one card “magically turn over” before slowly spreading through the cards.Instruct your spectator to place their selected card on top of the half you cut off (photo 6) and then place the rest of the deck on top, effectively losing their card in the middle of the deck.Once they’ve memorized their card, split the deck in half and place the top half on the table or perform a Swing Cut (photos 1-6) in your hands.Next, spread through the deck and have a spectator select a card, being careful not to expose the face up card towards the bottom.So, from the bottom of the deck, there should be four face down cards and then a face up Five of Clubs (see photo above). ![]()
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