Saultaura by Wayne Fox & TCC Magic
Saultaura by Wayne Fox & TCC Magic
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Vanish a stack of salt in an instant right before your audience's eyes.
A packet of salt is torn open, and the contents are poured onto the table, forming a small mound. The empty packet is crumpled and left in plain view. Your spectator covers the salt with a napkin or cup. When they lift their hand, the salt is gone.
When they check the empty packet. it's now mysteriously resealed, restored, and filled with salt once again.
This is pure, organic magic seemingly impromptu, yet meticulously designed. Wayne Fox has refined Saltaura to perfection, making it incredibly easy to perform and an ideal everyday carry for magicians.
This compact and portable set comes with everything you need to perform this incredible trick anywhere, anytime. The specially crafted gimmick is incredibly realistic, designed to fool even the most discerning eyes.
- Deceptively simple and easy to perform.
- Handcrafted with ultra-realistic detail.
- Practical, portable, and perfect for real-world performances.
- Comprehensive tutorial, including a bonus effect by David Penn.
- Special handmade salt stack
- Custom designed gimmick
- Empty salt shaker
- A brush
- In-depth instruction by Wayne Fox, featuring a bonus effect by David Penn
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What people are saying
This is really good magic. It is remarkable easy and provides a wonderful opportunity to change the pace of a close up performance. It’s always effective while doing close up to break away from cards and coins for a little bit and perform some really exotic magic. Salt has such an ancient and mystical quality attached to it. You can create a really memorable routine if you choose to incorporate it with the Spice Phantom. Because what makes Saultaura so impactful is the audience really can’t see it coming. It does not look like a the kind of trick they are used to seeing. Frankly it looks messy. People would never expect you to start pouring salt on to a restaurant table or in a bar. It does not feel like coin or card magic. From the audience point of view, cards and coins seem containable and people are use to the idea that the magician can control them. Loose salt doesn’t come off quite like that. It just doesn’t look like you should be able to just perform at spur of the moment. Yet you can. I just get a piece of black construction paper and keep it folded in my pocket. Doesn’t matter if it’s all creased and folded, looks better when it is. The black paper will really make the salt pile pop. After you vanish a pile of salt and literally have a spectator find it in a pile somewhere else in the room, they will be stunned. At that point you can have them bring you from the found pile of salt a small quantity of salt in their open palm. Sprinkle loose pepper into the salt and vanish the mixed in pepper from the salt in spectators hand. Of course good magic should always be a surprise. Cards, coins, ropes ect is all great stuff, but no one would think this kind of magic can happen in such public places like a bar. Or even in someone’s home. As I said it looks like it should require special conditions. It may not feel like that to magicians, but it’s how the audience will see it. They have seen card and coin tricks at the mall, in McDonalds, in a bar, on the boardwalk, in the streets and even at their place of work and everywhere else. Believe me, they have not seen Saultaura. It will become a classic. Steve R
Hi Steve, Yes! Just the concept of using Salt which is right there is fantastic! So natural, it couldn't get any better. When I was young I used to use salt to balance a salt shaker. I loved doing that trick. Not magic but it was still a skill! If I had had this as a kid I would have been over the moon! Thanks for the terrific review! - Ron Teitelbaum!
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This is really good magic. It is remarkable easy and provides a wonderful opportunity to change the pace of a close up performance. It’s always effective while doing close up to break away from cards and coins for a little bit and perform some really exotic magic. Salt has such an ancient and mystical quality attached to it. You can create a really memorable routine if you choose to incorporate it with the Spice Phantom. Because what makes Saultaura so impactful is the audience really can’t see it coming. It does not look like a the kind of trick they are used to seeing. Frankly it looks messy. People would never expect you to start pouring salt on to a restaurant table or in a bar. It does not feel like coin or card magic. From the audience point of view, cards and coins seem containable and people are use to the idea that the magician can control them. Loose salt doesn’t come off quite like that. It just doesn’t look like you should be able to just perform at spur of the moment. Yet you can. I just get a piece of black construction paper and keep it folded in my pocket. Doesn’t matter if it’s all creased and folded, looks better when it is. The black paper will really make the salt pile pop. After you vanish a pile of salt and literally have a spectator find it in a pile somewhere else in the room, they will be stunned. At that point you can have them bring you from the found pile of salt a small quantity of salt in their open palm. Sprinkle loose pepper into the salt and vanish the mixed in pepper from the salt in spectators hand. Of course good magic should always be a surprise. Cards, coins, ropes ect is all great stuff, but no one would think this kind of magic can happen in such public places like a bar. Or even in someone’s home. As I said it looks like it should require special conditions. It may not feel like that to magicians, but it’s how the audience will see it. They have seen card and coin tricks at the mall, in McDonalds, in a bar, on the boardwalk, in the streets and even at their place of work and everywhere else. Believe me, they have not seen Saultaura. It will become a classic. Steve R
Hi Steve, Yes! Just the concept of using Salt which is right there is fantastic! So natural, it couldn't get any better. When I was young I used to use salt to balance a salt shaker. I loved doing that trick. Not magic but it was still a skill! If I had had this as a kid I would have been over the moon! Thanks for the terrific review! - Ron Teitelbaum!