Noted Notes
/I've been searching for a good impression pad for years. I looked at easily a dozen or more in that time. Mostly all do a good job of getting the impression. That wasn't the issue. The issue was they often looked weird and/or required an unusual procedure before the spectator wrote something down or in order to get the read of the impression. The great thing about Chris Rawlins' Noted is not only is the impression clear, it's also the most inconspicuous and recognizable impression pad I've ever used.
I keep one on my bedroom dresser along with the marker. That's where it lives for spontaneous performing.
For example, the other day my friend stops over on his lunch break. I tell him I want to try something. I open the drawer on my living room end-table as if looking for something. "Actually, go in my bedroom. On my dresser there's a Post-it pad. I want you to write a four digit number on it and shout when you're done."
He went in the other room and wrote down a number and let me know when he was finished.
I tell him to pull off the sheet he wrote on and attach it to the back of one of his credit cards, and sandwich it between two other cards in his wallet.
"We'll pretend that's important information, like a PIN code for your bank account," I tell him. "We'll get back to it later."
Later on I call him up and ask him if he did anything after work.
"I stopped at the used bookstore," he says.
"Interesting," I say. "Do you remember seeing me at the bookstore?"
No, he tells me.
"Did you feel anyone bump into you or get particularly close to you while you were there?" Not that he remembers. "And if you don't remember it happening once, you certainly don't remember it happening twice, of course."
I then go on to explain I'm trying to learn a new system of pickpocketing techniques. And that I grabbed his wallet, peeked the number he wrote down, and put it back in his pocket all without him knowing. I then told him the number he wrote down.
He—having forgotten precisely what he wrote—had to double-check in his wallet. And he was audibly taken aback when he confirmed I was right.
Did he really think I pickpocketed him and put the wallet back? Probably not. It's just a more interesting premise than saying, "I know the number you wrote down."
This is what I like about Noted. You don't need to be near the spectator when they use it. They write on it and remove the sheet as they would if the pad were ungimmicked. You don't need to micromanage them or get them to do something unusual.
The other day I was in my bedroom with a woman. (We were just listening to records, mom!) I stayed in the bed and rolled onto my stomach and asked her to go over to the dresser and write a word on the Post-it pad that was there.
It's very clear from this setup—me, on the other side of the room, face down (ass up?) in bed—that I can't see anything she's doing. I told her to take off the note and leave the room and go to another room, or even outside, and find an interesting place to stick it and then come back to me.
When she came back, I said, "Okay, so I can turn over now? There's nothing for me to see, yes? The paper is not even in this room anymore, right?" She agreed.
I rolled over onto my back and patted the bed for her to sit down.
"That was a free choice of word, yes? You don't feel like I made you write that word over any other word, do you?" Of course not.
"Okay, let's try this. Tell me where you stuck the note." She said it was on top of one of the blades on the ceiling fan in the dining room.
I told her I was going to try and project my consciousness out of my body and that note was going to be the proof I really did it. I did some deep breathing and then lay still for a moment. After ten seconds or so I did a big inhale as if I was just coming back to my body. I propped myself up on my elbows. "Okay, this is good. Thanks for helping me test this. I was trying it earlier and I thought it was working, but there's no real way to know for sure if you're not just imagining you're doing it. That's why this word thing works as a test. I did see a Post-it with a word on it when I left my body. But again, I'm not sure if it's real or not. Did the word you wrote start with a B?" I asked, as if I was afraid to fully commit to what I saw just yet.
"Yesss," she said, dubiously.
"Was it 'blossom'?" I asked.
"What!" she said, and picked up a pillow and hit it against my chest. "How?"
"Oh, sorry. When you told me where you put the Post-it, I sent my consciousness out of my body and it floated down the hall to the dining room and I went up above the ceiling fan where I read the word you wrote down." I said. As if that explained things.
Actually (if it’s not obvious) when she left the room, I quickly jumped out of bed, got the peek from the pad, and jumped back in bed.
Noted is available directly from Chris. I believe it's currently sold out but will be back in stock later this month, including potentially the larger square-sized Post-it version (although I'm not sure about that).