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Turn water into ink and vice versa. Focus secret

Spectacular tricks and their clues

Directory / Spectacular tricks and their clues

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Focus Description:

On one table is a bottle of ink, on the other is a bottle of clean water. The magician takes a splinter and lowers it, opening the cork, into the ink. Taking out a splinter, he shows the audience that it is stained with ink. Having placed the bottle of ink in front of everyone, the performer goes to the second table and, pouring some water into a glass, drinks it, thus proving that the bottle contains pure water. The illusionist then corks the bottle, wraps it in newspaper and places it on the table so that the bottle does not roll off. He goes back to the first bottle and does the same with it.

After that, the performer makes passes in the direction from the first bottle to the second and back. Approaching the first bottle, he opens it, and the audience sees that it contains pure water instead of ink. Putting the bottle on the table, the magician goes to the second table, unfolds the newspaper, takes out the second bottle, and everyone sees that ink is poured into it. The water is gone! Having removed the cork, the artist lowers a splinter into the bottle, which immediately turns into the color of ink. Approaching the first bottle, the magician pours some water from it and drinks it (Fig. 110).

Focus Turning water into ink and vice versa
Fig. 110

Props:

Two bottles.

Prepared cork. Secret device.

Glass.

Focus secret:

The secret of the trick falls into two: the first is the transformation of ink into water; the second is water in ink. The first bottle contains pure water, and a bundle of black woolen threads is lowered into it, which is tied to a ring; its diameter is equal to the inside of the bottle. The ring is made of a very thin, silk-insulated wire, dyed in the color of woolen threads. A thin nylon thread is tied to the ring, the end of which is brought out of the bottle. If the water in the bottle slightly covers the ring with woolen threads tied to it, then the illusion of ink is created from a distance. On fig. 111, And this simple device is shown.

Focus Turning water into ink and vice versa
Fig. 111

The magician closes the bottle with a cork and puts it on the table. When opening the cork, one must not disturb the thread to which the ring with woolen yarn is tied. To prove that there is "ink" in the bottle, they take a splinter, one side of which is colored with ink, and the other is clean. The performer shows the audience a splinter from the clean side and, dropping it into the bottle, turns it to the other side. A drop of water will fall from the splinter, but you need to make sure that the audience does not notice it. When wrapping a bottle in a newspaper, you need to discreetly take out a ring with wool by a thread and put it in a newspaper. The bottle will contain clean water, which must be immediately closed with a cork.

There is a special device for ink sampling - a prepared teaspoon. Her double-walled pen holds ink. At the right moment, they flow into a spoon into which they have just poured water (in fact, they pretended to pour water).

The secret of turning pure water in the second bottle into ink is much simpler: the cork for this bottle is made hollow, a hole is drilled inside (Fig. 111, B), which is filled with easily soluble ink powder. It is sealed in a cork with a layer of the thinnest tissue paper. As soon as water gets on it, the paper will immediately get wet, and the powder will dissolve and form real ink. Having opened the cork, the conjurer lowers a splinter into it and, taking it out, shows it from both sides. Before wrapping the bottle of powder in newspaper, shake the bottle and then put it down so that the powder combines with water. When deployed, shake imperceptibly again.

After the ink has "turned" into water, the performer pretends to drink it. In fact, it's best not to. There may be remains of hairs and ink from a splinter in the water.

Author: Vadimov A.A.

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