


It happens again, and again until the outjogged selection ends up on top of the deck. With just a shake, the outjogged card rises out a quarter of the way up the deck.

What They Say: You insert a selection into the deck and leave it outjogged near the bottom. With Raise Rise there is no signal the card has just risen so it takes a moment to register (Not disrespecting Raise Rise at all) and Chris is a nice guy he is funny and very laid back I enjoy watching any of his videos and any of his material. Its deffinately not as hard as Raise Rise and I believe it has a more visual aspect you riffle down and you are bassically saying your card will rise to here. This move is initially intended for a rising card but it can be used for very clean switches aswell. Yes the ambitious riser move is difficult, but i think the word for it would be time consuming.Thoughts: The move is Fantastic I absolutely love it. (knacky as well haha)alot of younger magicians think that if you dont master a trick in a month its too hard to do.The only thing i think is 'hard' is the anti-faro haha.I really don't want to upset anyone, i just want kids that have not done magic very long to know that nothing is too hard to do, it will just take years and not hours to get down.Thanks for reading and God bless! It seems like magicians are trying to scare beginners.I have been doing 'Raise Rise' for about two years and can do it pretty good i think. Similar quotes come with the book 'by forces unseen', everyone says the tricks are really hard, i don't think thats the best definition, i just think they are time consuming to learn. Yes the ambitious riser move is difficult, but i think the word for it would be time consuming.

It seems like magicians are trying to scare beginners.I have been doing 'Raise Rise' for about two years and can do it pretty good i think. They went clinically insane.Ray Kosby is the Sergei Rachmaninoff of card magic.
