Some Of Deck Review: The Uncommon Tarot by Shaheen Miro
Tarot of the QTPOC Deck Review: Star Spinner Tarot — Asali Earthwork
The Sugar Skull Tarot Deck and Guidebook (Sugar Skull Tarot Series): Ross, David A, Martínez, Carolina: 9781982176853: Amazon.com: Books
The Basic Principles Of TarotArts - Quality Tarot Decks - Cards to Spark your Intuition
keywords on the Minors(with the exception of the Aces and Courts ). The cards have a really light sheen to them, however are primarily matte, which I truly like. The deck is, quite sadly (for me), printed on reasonably inflexible and thicker card stock, similar to( however apparently not rather as stiff as )the Paulina Tarot. This is a fairly brand-new development from U.S. Games, and it is so disappointing to me, since these are two decks that I would love to use on a routine basis that I will not have the ability to, merely due to the absence of convenience and ease while shuffling. I discover this card stock easily creases and remains unyielding no matter how much shuffling is done. That's the problem(and won't even be bad news to those who like this brand-new card stock). The rest is just good news! Go Here For the Details on the cards are wonderfully refreshing. The artist didn't fill out every square inch of space on each card(making it feel quite the reverse of the minutely detailed Paulina Tarot or Shadowscapes Tarot). The images get their messages across in a simple way, without requiring to give a thousand clues to.
help you along. The people in the deck have blank faces, entirely without eyes, noses or mouths. I found the result to be comparable to the Sakki-Sakki Tarot( which features headless bodies ). The atmosphere of the card, along with the simple significance and body postures express everything quite clearly. I believe this is a wonderful deck to practice reading intuitively, as it gives your mind space to wander by itself. The Minors each have a common background. The Wands all take location on terracotta dry land, with a dark night (sometimes-starlit )sky as a backdrop. Swords figures are either in the clouds themselves, or set in front of a daytime, blue-skies-and-white-clouds day. And Pentacles all have an orange-yellow sky, some cards with yard and others set on desert sand. Some may find the suit themes dull, but I truly, actually like it. I think if the colors were intense and garish, it would be too much. A bit perplexing, that. The actual sun just appears in 3 Major Arcana cards, among them being, of course