Thanks for your help, Don. Really apreciate it.
Really nervous...and stil 2 weeks left for the first performance.
Yes, I know what invis. deck is.
Thanks for the gaff cards idea. Seems fun.
I didn't know what Wow is. I searched, and found face up and face down versions. Which is best for this kind of performance?
Is this what you advise to buy? Phoenix Parlour Deck - marked - Set of 2 Decks.
So, ghostly prediction is a trick where you use a marked deck to know what card was picked, and then use an invis. deck for the reveal, is that it?
Is this marked decks ok? Whic one should I buy?
Bicycle Maiden Gamblers Marked Deck
Phoenix SUM Deck
Phoenix Card-Shark's Marked Deck
I'm not sticking to card routines. I will learn whatever is best for entertain the kids. Have any ideas?
If you aren't sticking to cards, then you need to hit a magic store quick for a DVD on kids' parties. Because in essence, that's what you have - a decent-sized party of kids - except for the fact that they aren't going home after the cake and ice cream...
99% or more of my repertoire is card magic.
WOW face down is good for completing "Ambitious Card" routines. WOW face up is a little more multipurpose - you can make a card appear to change right before the spectators' eyes. I've seen kids go bug-eyed when they see it.
As stated, the Parlour deck is good for slightly larger audiences due to better visibility without having to resort to full-blown Jumbo-Size decks (typically 4x the size of a standard card and impossible to do sleight work with). The fact that it's marked is just an added bonus which you can use to your advantage.
My "ghostly prediction" specifically uses a Gambler's Deck, such as the Bicycle Maiden Backs you mentioned. When stacked correctly, you can not only see which card is on top of the deck, but which card is on the BOTTOM of the deck as well. That's what makes it so useful with an Invisible Deck routine. I can tell my spectators that I can't see the front of the card, and if it was a marked deck, I can't even see the back of the card so it would do me no good at all. (Creative license!)
I've never used the SUM deck, and I own the other - it's good, easy to read at a distance and gets the job done, but I wouldn't risk using it at a poker table! I'd say that the best "straight reading" marked cards I've seen were the Ultimate Marked Deck in the Rider Back design and the GT Speedreaders in the Mandolin Back design. Both employ very similar markings and don't require any code or pattern translation to figure out what the card is. The UMD is out of print and prices are climbing into the ballpark of $40 a deck for it (it can never be reprinted, because USPC no longer allows altered Rider Back decks to be made). GT Speedreaders are very available. UMD is best for poker cheating and useful for magic, while the GTS is very good for magic and nearly useless in a card game.
Best "decoding required" marked deck I've seen in recent days has to be the Daniel Madison Players from Theory11. But they're sold out and fetching a nice premium for resellers. They're good enough to pass a simple "riffle test" - a common test used to look for markings on a marked deck. The other decks just can't do that. But you do have to memorize the marking pattern (as if magicians didn't have enough to memorize, right?).