(1 customer review)

Silhouette Sorcery by Alan Warner

(c. 1978)

Thank-you so much for taking the time to update and improve the content on MartinsMagic.com. It has taken twenty years to build this website and we’re just getting started! You can read more about our History Project here.

With your help we can continue to grow the site and maintain it’s standing as the Largest Online Magic Collection today and as a free resource for all magicians to share around the world. Please take the time to fill-in as many details below as you can. (We look at all submissions, but It might take a few days to validate your comments and make the changes so please bear with us.)

1 review for Silhouette Sorcery by Alan Warner

  1. George Guerra

    Simply Incredible Early Warner Magic

    I have been a collector of Alan’s mini-magic since my first piece in December 2001. I never looked into his early children effects simply because they were big props and I have never been interested in children’s magic. This apparatus came up for sale and I hesitated buying it, so it sold quickly to another buyer. Fortunately the new owner later offered it to me and, after some long thinking, I finally gave in to buy it. I am glad I did.

    First, it’s large compared to Alan’s current line and the method later incorporated into Kryptic Keys. The card houlette is 4-5 times bigger than the teak one used in Kryptic Keys. Overall, the apparatus provided is simply beautiful. The cards are plastic but the painted designs are actually wood cuts perfectly glued onto the white plastic cards. It looks gorgeous. The paint job is first class, reminiscent of the Milson-Worth apparatus..and that’s a bold statement.

    The effect is most entertaining with a strong patter, clever method, and again, fantastic props. The story centers on Shamus, the rabbit of an Irish magician, who loves doing his own magic. First, the full silhouette of the rabbit is seen and hidden behind the house, laid on a black easel which provides support. Attention is then turned to his colored hats in the houlette. The red hat card is chosen by the day of the week and the stack of colored hats held by a child. Shamus scampers off to his hats and makes his magical appearance on the selected hat. But has Shamus really left the house? His silhouette is then discovered to now be a cut out of a rabbit. What a Shamus!

    Alan is truly a master craftsman with brilliant ideas behind all his magic. I am most fortunate to add this beautiful apparatus to my collection.

Add a review

If you want to submit a product review click here.

You may also like…