The Two Ways I Vanish Coins and Why
/A couple months ago, I wrote about an inherent flaw I see when false transfers are used for a vanish, which is that people just sort of figure them out. Whether you're doing a basic French Drop or a more beautiful, refined coin vanish, the reaction is usually the same. The hand opens to reveal the coin is gone > brief surprise > then their eyes go to the other hand.
You might think, "Ah, I need to ditch the coin before I reveal it has vanished. That way, when they look to the other hand, it's empty."
That's the right instinct, but it's not enough. You can't just false transfer then ditch the coin in your pocket while you focus is on your other hand.
I mean, you can do that, and it will work, just so long as you're performing for the guy from Flowers for Algernon right as he's beginning to turn into a moron again.
This is something I see magicians do a lot. They give their spectators credit for having half a brain, but never a full one.
If we agree that a person might assume the coin never went in the hand, then it's also not a huge stretch to think that you might have done something with the coin while they weren't focusing on the wrong hand. Ditching it in your pocket isn't the master deception you imagine it to be.
After the previous post, a few people emailed to ask what I would use to vanish a coin.
Well, ideally, you need a vanish with a ditch that happens before the coin disappears and without the dirty hand going out of "frame." Without it being dropped by your side.
For that reason, here are what I consider to be the two strongest coin vanishes in real-world performing situations. Others may look more magical to the eyes, but I've found these to be the strongest when it comes to preventing the spectator from thinking, "Well, he must have never put it in the hand in the first place and then he got rid of it somehow."
First, there's the one where the coin is false-transferred via a thumb clip and then secretly ditched into the breast pocket while the dirty hand waves over the hand "holding the coin."
[GIFs below are just to illustrate what I’m talking about. I think these vanishes work best in the real world, not on video.]
Does this have a name? Is there someone who should be credited with this?
Everything here feels fairly natural. The wave is justified as a "magical gesture." But if you don't like that, you can find some other excuse to bring your hand toward your body briefly (you can bring the dirty hand up to scratch your chin, for example—I like to leave some scrambled eggs on my face from breakfast to dry throughout the day, that way I always have a fully justified reason to bring my hand toward my face: I'm a disgusting slob).
My second favorite vanish is what I called the "best coin vanish" years ago. Although at that time I didn't fully know why it was so good.
In that post there are GIFs used to point out the naturalness of this vanish as opposed to most vanishes. But in making that point, I didn't do what I do in real life, which is to lap the coin while I pick it up, and then pretend to place the coin into the other hand before vanishing it. (I'm not suggesting I came up with this. I think it's how most people do it.)
This transfer of nothing from one hand to the other really strengthens the vanish. It gives people an extra step they need to go backwards in order to unravel what happened, and I've found people are shockingly bad at going more than one step backwards with what they saw. It's like when you're listening to someone drone on and they say, "Are you listening to me?" And you say, "Yes." And they say, "What did I just say then?" And you say, "You said the grocery store wasn't stocking the brand of pecans you like anymore." Now, if the person asked you what they said before that, you'd have no idea. The fact is, you weren't listening. But we're good at reiterating something that just happened. But going two steps backwards is something we have to be prepared to do.
With this vanish, I feel spectators "remember" you placing the coin from your right hand into your left. But they don't really remember never seeing the coin in the right hand. And that's because the way the coin is picked up is so natural that it raises zero suspicion.
These two coin vanishes give me two options: one I can do standing (so long as I have a breast pocket) and one I can do seated at a table. These cover most circumstances that I find myself in.
A final option:
A few people wrote in after the previous post to recommend a steal instead of a false transfer, and they all pointed to Ben Earl’s work on this as the place to learn it. I haven’t looked into this myself, but everything Ben does looks great and I’m sure this is an excellent option.