Shades Vol. 1 by Biz and Big Blind Media
Created by: Biz, Big Blind Media
Key features
Collection of 10 distinct color changes by Biz
Categorized by difficulty: All Levels, Some Practice, and Insane
Designed for both social media and real-life performances
Focus on the intersection of fun and practicality
Includes techniques like Swipe Up, Twirl, No Movement Erdnase, Swing, Printscreen, Rotator, Snappini, Slam, Tango, and Cage
Available as a downloadable/purchasable product
Aimed at inspiring more frequent practice and performance
Pros
Diverse range of techniques suitable for different skill levels
Clear difficulty categorization helps magicians gauge commitment required
Designed for both digital and live performance contexts
Focus on making practice enjoyable to encourage mastery
Created by an experienced magician with practical performance insights
Cons
Some techniques may be too challenging for complete beginners
Focus on color changes specifically rather than broader card magic
Requires consistent practice to master the more difficult changes
Effect
Shades Vol. 1 is a collection of ten color changes. A color change is a magic move where one playing card visibly changes into another card in the magician's hands. These changes are visual and direct. The audience sees one card instantly become a different card. The effects range from simple transformations to more complex and surprising visual changes.
Full details
Shades Vol. 1 by Biz contains ten different methods for changing a card. The collection is organized into three groups based on how hard they are to learn. The first group is for all skill levels. It includes changes called Swipe Up, Twirl, No Movement Erdnase, Swing, and Printscreen. The second group requires some practice. It includes Rotator, Snappini, Slam, and Tango. The third group has one change called Cage, which is noted as being very challenging. The creator, Biz, designed these changes to be both fun to do and useful for performances. Some methods work well for filming short videos for social media. Other methods are better for live, in-person magic shows.
Who should consider the trick
This collection is for card magicians who want to learn new visual moves. It is good for performers who work in different settings. If you do magic for friends or at events, the practical changes will be useful. If you create content for platforms like Instagram or TikTok, the visually focused changes will be helpful. The collection is also suitable for magicians who want to enjoy practicing card magic more. Biz states the goal is to make people want to pick up their cards more often.
Information on how difficult it is to perform
The difficulty varies across the ten changes. Five changes are marked for all levels. A beginner can start learning these. Four changes are in the some practice category. These will take more time and repetition to perform smoothly. One change, called Cage, is in the insane category. This single move is described as highly challenging. It will require significant dedication to master. The collection provides options for magicians at different stages of skill development.
What magicians say
The promotional material from Big Blind Media features the creator Biz. He explains his philosophy for the collection. Biz says the changes exist at the intersection of fun and practicality. He argues that if a move is fun to practice, a magician will practice it more. If a move is practical, a magician will use it in real shows. Reviewer BigBlindMedia notes that Biz designed these changes to serve different purposes. Some are for the visual impact needed on social media. Others are for real life performance. Biz states the entire set is designed to be fun to explore and execute. The overall promise is that these visual and practical changes will motivate magicians to handle their cards more frequently.
What people are saying about Shades Vol. 1
BigBlindMedia says...
The creator, Biz, frames the project around a core philosophy: the intersection of fun and practicality. He argues that if a move is enjoyable to practice, a performer is more likely to master it, and if it's practical, they are more likely to integrate it into real-world performances.
Promotional videos
Shades Vol. 1 (10 Colour Changes) by Biz | Trailer
BigBlindMedia mentioned this magic trick in this video.
