This playlist contains video's that are also uploaded to our Kickstarter (running from 6/24-7/24). This is the crowd funding platform we are using to raise money for our one of a kind epic Tarot Deck.
Small-Size Decks Tarot Decks. Miniature, tiny, or small-size Tarot decks. African Tarot. Now also available in a full 78 card edition. Black Hand Lenormand.
The 78 Tarot Project: 78 artists. 1 tarot deck. All mediums, all genres, and total creative freedom. A one of a kind collective masterpiece. We are 78 artists from around the world brought together by social media to create a one-of-a-kind collective masterpiece celebrating art and tarot. You can read more about us on our website - You can also follow us via.
When you consider how much blank books are going for these days, this book is a bargain even though it's paperback. It has a page for every tarot card, with a brief meaning, and plenty of blank space where you can write your own personal notes about what that card means to you. In addition, though the blurb doesn't even mention this, it comes with a miniature version of the 'Tarot Nova' in cardboard, which you can 'tear along the dotted lines' and then you have a little tarot deck. It's quite small, so it might not be of much use except as a conversation piece. Or, you could get a box/pouch/etc. And carry this deck in your purse in case you feel the urge to do a spur-of-the-moment reading in the coffee shop.
If you don't feel compelled to get a traditional, serious, Rider-Waite-ish deck, and you have decent eyesight, this is a charming (and cheap) Tarot deck. A small hardback interpretive booklet dwarfs the little box of cards attached to it by a black ribbon. The cards are exactly the height of a nickel, perfectly reduced versions of the Nova deck. They have sharp graphics, attractive colors, and a homey presentation of the conventional Tarot cards and their meanings.
They come printed on one long accordian-folded strip, perforations between each, but I recommend cutting them apart with scissors to avoid the fuzzy paper bumps left by perforations. How To Start A Palliative Care Program. It's more fun than a chore, because it gives you a chance to examine and bond with each card. My quibbles, like the deck, are small: 1) Watch out. It's so easy to lose things this size! 2) You can read the numbers, but the names of the suits and major arcana are too small to make out clearly.
However, the corners are color coded--blue for cups, green for pentacles, etc--and there's normally a recognizable cup or sword or whatever in the graphic. 3) The booklet's interpretations remind me of cheap newspaper horoscopes and all start sounding the same to me; I think half of them tell you to take a break or reconsider your options or be alert for new opportunities. I prefer Tarot books to tell you the fundamental Idea underlying each card and keep advice to a minimum. E.G I'd say, 'Six of swords: the Journey to Avalon. Transition, new horizons, visionquests'; or 4 of Pentacles: the Miser.