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Flightcase

Eggink, Peter

PE Illusions

(Based on 1 review)
From the creative mind of Peter Eggink comes the cleanest signed card to card case!

Imagine the following: ANY card is selected and signed by the spectator. Next, you show the card case to be completely empty (it REALLY is empty) and is placed in between the hands of the spectator.

Suddenly the signed card visually disappears, only to be found INSIDE the card case that was show EMPTY just seconds ago. The best part is that everything happens in the hands of the spectator and everything may be fully examined afterward.

Forget what you know about other card to card case effects - "FlightCase" is the one you will want to perform every time!

The brand new method is diabolically clever and the fool even the most experienced of magicians!

The full training DVD will guide you step by step on how to perform the routine, sleights and techniques.

What People are saying about FlightCase...

"You are a GENIUS! I LOVE IT!!! You are definitely onto a winner here!"
- Keelan Leyser - MagicTricks.co.uk

"Direct, easy, visual and baffling, a recipe for a perfect magic trick!"
- Peter Loughran

"Very clever and sure did fool me; the secret is brilliant! -Jason Palter
- Paltergeist Unlimited

"A simple yet ingenious utility - Peter Eggink has a bit of the devil inside him!"
- David Regal

"Flightcase looks perfect - clever, clever, clever"
- Jay Sankey

Running Time Approximately: 45min

Reviews

Joe Diamond

Official Reviewer

Jun 04, 2014

This is a pretty nice gimmicked card case that allows you to do a version of ‘signed card to card case.’ The DVD is shot on the street and in Peter’s backyard. Peter is not that great of a teacher, and it takes him close to fifteen minutes of talking about how great the effect is before he actually teaches it.

The gimmick is a gimmick. What I mean is that it’s not the coolest thing in the world, but it is kind interesting in how it creates the effect. The effect at least looks clean, but I don’t feel it’s worth the thirty two dollar price tag.

Dave Forrest’s "DeLorian" is less expensive, gives more practical ideas and has a freer range than this. While the gimmick isn’t bad, the price and DVD make me less inclined to recommend it.

Two and a Half Stars.
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