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Details

First Hand

Miller, Justin

Paul Harris Prsents

(Based on 2 reviews)
You bring out your wallet and remove four single dollars, fold them in half, and place them onto ANYONE'S OPEN HAND. You can even wrap a rubber band around the four dollars to keep them secure. Your own hand are empty. Your wallet can be shown on both sides. The four dollars are in full view on her hand. But when you gently tap her handful of four dollars... they INSTANTLY CHANGE into FOUR HUNDREDS (Or tens or twenties). Your hands are STILL EMPTY...your wallet can still be shown on both sides... and she can IMMEDIATELY EXAMINE her four changed bills! You never have to touch the bills after they change.

The moment the change happens, the deed is done and there is nothing else to switch or steal!
  • Change happens in full view on spectator's open hand
  • Very Very easy to do
  • No palming
  • You never have to touch the bills after they change
  • Changed bills can be immediately examined
  • Perform surrounded and in just about all conditions
  • Re-sets in seconds
  • Works with most foreign currency
  • Customize your gimmicks for any bills in two minutes
Plus Two Big Bonus Effects

Big Bonus #1
Justin Miller's No Gimmicks Bill Change:

The NO GIMMICKS, No Palming, Multiple Bill Change!

Just as flashy and easy as the other variations of the classic Pat Page effect: Four one's visually transform into four other bills at your fingertips. But the NO-GIMMICKS BILL CHANGE gives you the freedom to use whatever combination of NORMAL UNPREPARED BILLS you happen to have in your wallet! All the changed bills can be examined and used to pay for a purchase. You can even borrow the dollars form your spectator's to make the change!

NO GIMMICKS! NO SPECIAL BILLS! EASY TO DO!
Just a five second get ready with your NORMAL BILLS!

Big Bonus #2
Justin Miller's Ka-Ching:

Freedom to pay your tab by visually transforming your STARBUCKS GIFT CARD into FOUR BILLS!

Complete with special First Hand supplies and Jam-Packed instructional DVD.

Reviews

Bryce Kuhlman

Official Reviewer

Apr 10, 2013

This is one of those effects that sounds too good to be true. Even with the demo video, it's almost unbelievable. Well, believe it, folks!

Go ahead, watch the demo video.

Yeah, there's that one moment where you tap the bills with your wallet. Why? Well, unlike pulling out some strange object (like a guinea pig box), you're using the wallet that you pulled the money from. And you can show both sides of the wallet immediately following the change, so there's nothing to see. In fact, with the right routine structure, you can hand out the wallet. And, as the description says, the changed bills are completeley normal.

You'll have to engage in a bit of arts-and-crafts to make the gimmicks, but once they're made, life is pretty easy. The kit comes with materials to make gimmicks for black wallets, but Justin also explains how you can make them for any style or color of wallet you might have. Actually, there's no reason you even need to use a wallet.

I suppose the only thing that worried me about the routine is that Justin chooses to go from ones to hundreds. I tend to work high-end venues, so I wouldn't be worried, but you wouldn't catch me doing this on the street or in a bar. Luckily for you, the gimmicks can be made to go from any bill to any other bill. For that matter, they don't even have to be bills.
(Top ▲)

Jeff Stone

Official Reviewer

Jul 24, 2012

For $35 you get everything you need to perform an extremely visual effect plus a DVD full of a few blunders and a ton of great ideas.


Blunders:


This one is inconsequential, but important for fans of my dear friend Boris Pocus. There was a moment in an effect where Justin Miller was saying that the trick was "Verry Sthrong, Verry Sthrong."


He then said "as Boris Wild would say." Dear Justin - It was Boris Pocus (my close friend) not Boris Wild who coined said Phrase. If you don't believe that Mr. Pocus and I are close friends, just read this: proof that I know Boris Pocus.

On to the real blunders. There are four, 2 major ones (the first two) and two minor ones (the last two):


First "Major" Blunder: The gimmick supplied with the DVD only works with certain type of wallets. He suggests where to get the stuff to make a gimmick for the other types of wallets, but doesn't explain what to do to make the gimmick. He just says to get a certain type of cloth at a fabric store, and that's it. The supplied gimmicks are not cloth. They are vinyl-like paper. I honestly don't see how to do this with the "cloth from a fabric store."


The good news, however is that you can buy the "right kind of wallet" at Walmart for like 8 bucks.


Second Major Blunder: For the handling called Disappearing Bills, he attempts to explain his presentation. Here it is below (I actually transcribed this word for word):


So this is a very interesting piece of strange um to do. And I like to bring the situation around like it has to do . . . have you ever seen um "Back To the Future?" and they'll go "Yeah. Absolutely." Well money's kinda like that you know . . . once you have it and then sometimes you have a trail behind of how much you had and all that good stuff.

He then goes into the handling of the trick. Um . . . Huh? Reread that "patter" and tell me what the heck he's talking about. If you're gonna teach a presentational angle, teach a presentational angle.


First "Minor" Blunder: On one of the effects, he constantly says that it's a great opener. Then at the end of the effect, he says he would "never start with this effect." So which is it? A good opener or one you never start with?


Second "Minor" Blunder: He constantly, as "misdirection," asks the question (to the audience), "Are you right handed or left handed?" He often quickly follows that with "it doesn't matter . . ." That is a good technique for misdirection if you actually acknowledge the spectator's response (rather than talk over them and not even pause a millisecond to get an answer). The way Justin is using it, he might as well just say, "Hey! Look over there!"


As you know, I don't let the performance or whether or not I like the effect affect the final score which is why I labeled this as a minor blunder - for the DVD and product quality it is irrelevant. However, if you perform it this way, you (like Justin) will be making a MAJOR performance blunder.


The Great News


Having said all that I did above, I still believe that this product is something you should invest in. Oh First Hand, how do I love thee? Let me count the ways. Thou art visual and powerful. Yet thine secret is one of simplicity and practicality.


I've already run out of flowery Shakespearean Text (if you can even call it that). Here's the deal in plain English:


This is probably the best bill change I've ever seen. While some of the versions on the DVD look just about exactly the same as all the other changes on the market, there is one major difference. There are no gimmicks in this version, and everything can be handed out in the end. You're totally clean. There are both gimmicked and none gimmicked versions. The gimmicked versions change when you tap them with your wallet. The non-gimmicked versions change when you riffle the bills (much like the majority of the other ones on the market).


My favorite part of this DVD is the fact that every version leaves you in a situation where you are totally clean and the bills can be completely examined (after the change). The other killer part of this is that the gimmick is one you won't spend. How many times have you made up a set of stack-of-bills change gimmicks where you have to sacrifice a $100 dollar bill? You don't lose the bill, but it's "stuck" to the gimmick. If you get in a jam and need the cash, you have to tear apart your gimmick and spend your hundred dollar bill.


With this version, the only thing gimmicked is a single one dollar bill. Hopefully you'll never be so broke that you have to tear apart your one dollar bill gimmick. And of course, don't forget that there are several different ungimmicked handlings. Frankly, in some cases, I think the ungimmicked version is better and cleaner.


The handling, the method and "stuff" are very simple, very doable, and very practical. It's hard not to give this a great rating. I feel that I have to dock it a bit for the above listed blunders. However it will only be a 1/2 point dock because the only one that can't really be overcome is Justin's poor explanation of the "Back to The Future" so called patter. Other than that, this is a killer product, and worth the cost. If you like bill changes (ala Patrick Page/Greg Wilson/Karl Hein/Richard Sanders/etc.) then you can stop here and not ever have to buy another version. You WILL use this.


Final Verdict:
4.5 Stars with a Stone Status of Complete and Total GEM!

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