Hey, I was just wondering what DVD would be best for a beginner who wants to learn how to do Card Magic. I have absolutely no experience whatsoever in Card Magic, it's just a hobby I thought would be cool to pick up. Any suggestions?
Dang. Now I'm at a loss of which to buy. Born to Perform Card Magic or Royal Road to Card Magic @.@ Any thoughts on which is better? And why?
If you really want a DVD, I´ve not seen something better than the Card College 1 + 2 DVDs. They´re the best instruction DVDs for beginners (and intermediates) with such an amount of content I´ve ever encountered. And I own the RRTCM 5 DVD set by R.P. Wilson, too.
Both are great, but Giobbis teaching is second to none. He not only has keen eye a for the detail of the moves he describes, he also constantly talks about magic theory (misdirection, in-transit actions etc.).
For example, if you like Aaron Fishers DL , Giobbi´s teaching is similar. He also emphasizes that the pure mechanics alone are not enough (and not even the most important part) to be successfull and shows how to excecute the moves in the context of a performance and why you should do it that way.
The set is not cheap, but is worth it (to perfect all the stuff in there will keep you busy for a year or two) even if you already own the books.
Generally you´re right but if you are an absolute beginner I think it´s better to pick up a (good) DVD.Let me tell you one thing though that makes ALL books better than a DVD made from said book. Interpretation. If you learn from DVDs then you are learning the way the magician on the DVD performs magic (which may not suit your way of handling cards). If you pick up a book and read while you are practicing then you are learning YOUR way of doing the sleights and handling cards.
Some folks will prefer the books, others the DVDs. What you pick depends on how YOU learn from different mediums.
I don't think it is possible, for example, to learn the Pass properly entirely from a written description. You have no idea what it's supposed to NOT look like. At the very least, you have to see someone perform it so you understand that it can be done invisibly. Without seeing the final result, you can't understand how to get there.
Generally you´re right but if you are an absolute beginner I think it´s better to pick up a (good) DVD.
Interpretiation is just effective if you already know (at least to an extent) how it may look right when performed. I assume that an absolute beginner has no idea about that. The best books in the world will not help and he´ll very likely do it the wrong way. And learning it the wrong way will lead to bad habits. It´s hard to get rid of these later on.
That´s excactly what happens to me in the beginning. I started with RRTCM. The book. I had no idea how some of the moves should look like when performed (for example the classic pass) and did them wrong.
R.Paul Wilsons DVD was enlightening to me as I could see what I´ve done wrong.
The same goes for the Card College books. Although the descriptions are crystal clear and at no point difficult to understand, it´s another matter to see Roberto assembling the magic theory he talks about in his books in performance situations..
Seeing someone performing magic gives you confidence and motivation.
It also helps to know about pace and timing, something a book cannot teach. For more experienced beginners (having a basic foundation of card magic), intermediates, advanced magicians and further indepth studies, I agree that books are (maybe) the better medium to learn from. I think it´s best to have both.
Hardcore card magic book author Richard Kaufmann says that there´re sleights that are better learned from a visual medium.