Showing 1–16 of 18 results

Out of stock

Card in Wallet

£35.00

This is the Card in Wallet trick invented by Patrick Page in 1960 (yes it is that old) and used by many magicians as part of their routine, including Paul Daniels. A spectator signs their name on the back of a card and the magician opens a sealed wallet and reveals the signed card. A very powerful effect. The wallet can be used again and again and should last a lifetime for a working magician. A genuine leather wallet specially adapted for use by magicians.

Out of stock

Easy Money

£15.00

This is possibly the most well known of all the tricks and effects invented by Patrick Page but one that many people do not even realise was invented by him. It has been copied by magicians and dealers all over the world.

The copyright for the trick rests with Patrick Page Magic.

This includes a DVD showing you how to perform the trick and the gimmick with fake money which you can use to create your own gimmick using real pound notes, euro notes, dollars or whatever currency you want to use.

Dynamo recently appeared on tv with a variation (also invented by Patrick Page) of turning lottery tickets into money.

Hanky Panky Cloth

£30.00

The Hanky Panky Cloth is designed to produce or vanish almost any small object: coins, balls, packs of cards, packet of cigarettes etc.

The Hanky Panky Cloth Trick includes a Hanky Panky Cloth, the original written instructions by Patrick Page and a short DVD of the man himself demonstrating the effect (taken from The Pageboy Speaks DVD Lecture which is also available for purchase from this site).

And a further use of the cloth is to perform table top magic and gather items used before moving on to the next table. Patrick Page used this regularly when performing at functions at hotels and dinner functions.

Out of stock

Miser’s Dream Bell Bucket

£52.00

Introducing the Patrick Page Miser’s Dream Bucket—a lightweight, portable, and versatile prop used by the magician himself. This specially crafted bell bucket produces a captivating ringing sound as coins magically appear and land inside. Ideal for close-up acts, stage performances, and outdoor shows like Covent Garden, it was a key element in Patrick Page’s renowned Miser’s Dream routine. Not just for the act, Patrick also used it to carry his props. A whole chapter in “Magic Page by Page” is dedicated to mastering this effect.

Moneybag

£26.00

This has the true stamp of“Page brilliance” on it – a simple plot, completely practical and a total fooler! Oh and the best bit… it’s easy to do!

Best described as “The Miser’s dream in a bag”.

Great for close up. Spectators (children) get to look inside the bag and then before their very eyes coins appear from nowhere in the bag as they hit a small plate in the bag (small plate not supplied).

Out of stock

Pat Tube – Patrick Page’s version of the dye tube

£28.00

The Pat Tube – a specially weighted gimmick for barehand vanishes and exchanges of sponge balls, silks etc. Use it by itself of with a Topit Vanisher. Full instructions provided on how to use the item and how it came about.

 

Cost £26 inclusive of free worldwide postage and packing. First class mail for UK purchasers and air mail for those outside the UK.

 

Patlock

£55.00

This is a brilliant effect devised by Patrick Page that can be performed by magicians of all levels. The effect is for two borrowed wedding rings to be released from the shackle of a combination padlock which is set to the year of marriage of one of the lenders.

Patrick Page’s A Handful of Magic

£15.00

Patrick Page’s A Handful of Magic

Easy to perform. Ideal for novices and experienced magicians alike.

It uses special playing cards – with the name of items on them.

You spread out the cards and the person for whom you are performing the effect selects one of them. You do not see the playing card selected. The person looks at the card, puts it back in the pack of playing cards and shuffles them. You put the cards in our jacket pocket and then are going to produce the card that the person chose.

Well, that is what the person for whom you are performing the effect believes. In actual fact after putting the cards in your jacket pocket, you reach in and pull out the item that was on the playing card chosen. The item could be a Nut, Eraser, Coin, Knife, Stamp, Lighter, Aspirin or Pencil.

We provide you with the special playing cards required to perform the effect and full written instructions. You provide small versions of the items listed above.

The surprise wow effect is huge when you produce the object rather than the card.

This is an effect that you can perform again and again with success. It is a card trick with a difference. And very easy to perform

Patrick Page’s Colour Changing Jumbo

£13.00

This is a very simple and surprising change of a jumbo card. You are supplied with the jumbo cards necessary to perform the effect and full instructions devised by the inventor of the effect, Patrick Page.

When you count out the cards to the spectator(s) the last card changes its colour and suit.

Very simple to perform and guaranteed to amaze your public.

Patrick Page’s Cord-A-Cup

£20.00

Wonderful effect of passing a nylon thread through a mug or cup with the spectator holding both ends of the thread, The performer releases the mug or cup from the centre of the cord. The spectator can examine the mug and cord before and after the effect.

Patrick Page’s Double Mirage

£12.50

Patrick Page’s Double Mirage

This is one of a number of different Patrick Page versions of Double Mirage which itself is a variation of the Patrick Page One in the Middle effect which dates back to the mid 1950’s – more than 60 years ago!

Easy to perform. Ideal for novices and experienced magicians alike.

Despite its age, it is still a wonderful effect and one that audiences are not familiar with.

In the original One in the Middle effect which was a Three Card Monte, the queen vanished and reappeared in the performer’s pocket. In this version, the face of a 4th card is shown and place aside, face down. This card, eventually, is revealed to have changed to the vanished queen.

Patrick Page’s Fifty Fifty Cards

£13.50

This is a card effect that has been around for many years and Patrick Page came up with a variation. In the original effect, the performer never knew which cards the spectators had selected until they actually placed the cards on the table.

In the Patrick Page version, the performer is the one who looks through the cards and places them face down on the table BEFORE the spectators name their cards.

Patrick Page’s Old Moore’s Diary Trick

£20.00

Simple to perform Old Moore’s Diary Trick. It can be self working for the beginner magician or with some clever shuffling of the pack, it can be even more impressive. It is the ultimate take on a diary trick. No questions asked. No forcing of cards. It can be repeated immediately. Only one diary used. It can be used for leap years. The diary is in full view of the spectator all the time. The diary should last a lifetime. It comes with a diary, full written instructions on how to perform the clip and a PAL DVD clip of Patrick Page performing the trick with his patter. The DVD should work on all MAC and PC computers.

Patrick Page’s Princesp Trick

£12.00

A variation on a card trick but with ESP cards.

Patrick Pages Princesp Trick – blow the mind of your audience as a spectator chooses an ESP card and shuffles the pack, and you manage to find it again for them.

Purse Frame

£21.00

In one of the many boxes that came from Patrick’s house we found a small amount of the original Purse Frame Trick instruction booklets copyright dated 1988.

This 34 page A5 size publication is his take on what he called “one of the greatest little gadgets ever dreamed up by magicians for the entertainment of lay people” and said “it’s funny, it’s magical and it’s easy”.

The booklet comes with the Purse Frame. You can now use it to make large coins, sponge balls, packs of cards etc. – appear in the imaginary purse.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DpOzQrj53bI

Sleeve Dropper

£23.00

This Sleeve Dropper was invented by Patrick Page and regularly used as part of his act.

The Sleeve Dropper is a device originally intended to release a Jumbo size coin into the sleeve of the performer.

If the performer’s arm is in a bent elbow position, the coin will remain in the sleeve until the performer’s hand is dropped to his side.

At that moment the coin will drop down the sleeve into the performer’s waiting hand, to be produced or revealed as the performer desires.

Great for using to switch a pack of cards that a spectator has shuffled with a stacked deck