Tarot Texas Rotating Header Image

Decks

The Gilded Tarot

 

The Traditional Tarot for the 21st Century Most Tarot decks with really spectacular designs are really just art collections. The Gilded Tarot transcends this limitation by having some of the most strikingly beautiful art on any Tarot deck, yet follows the Rider-Waite-Smith model. The result is a unique deck that any person with some Tarot experience will find instantly familiar and usable. This deck can be used with any Tarot system or book. You really must see the cards to believe their

Sale Price:$16.47

Read Morebuy now


Two Kinds of Tarot Decks: Part 2, Reading Decks

As I wrote in the first part of this series, Two Kinds of Tarot Decks: Part 1, Art Decks, to me there are two main kinds of tarot decks: art decks and reading decks. This part covers tarot decks that are easy to use for actually reading tarot, rather than just being works of art.

Reading Decks

The queen of reading decks is the Rider-Waite deck. It is certainly not the only good deck for learning and reading tarot, but it is certainly the one to start with. Here’s why.

The imagery of the major arcana, the trumps, of the Rider-Waite deck was specified by the great 20th-century hermeticist and mystic, A.E. Waite, a major figure in the famous Golden Dawn magical lodge. That’s why the deck bears his name.

But what made the Rider-Waite deck revolutionary, and what made it a tarot standard, is the imagery on the minor arcana, the suit cards. The minor arcana are just as rich in imagery as the trump cards. That is why the deck is so easy to read. And that is why most modern decks are based on the Rider-Waite at least to some degree—even if their artists and publishers do not realize it.

More on the Rider-Waite in another article. The point, however, is that most decks that are good for reading have complex imagery on the minor arcana, the suit cards, not just on the trumps.

For good readings the imagery should be complex and relevant to the tarot. I’m not talking about just complicated designs. Each card should offer a wealth of evocative, psychologically active imagery that helps one’s subconscious mind convey ideas and feelings relevant to the traditional meaning tarot meaning of that card.

That is, someone might come up with a completely new deck with complex imagery on a different system that can be used to give fairly accurate readings, and it might still not be a tarot deck. There are such decks. But they are not tarot decks.

The very best way to find a good reading deck is to try out the deck. But opening a new deck and laying it out in the store is usually not allowed. If you can handle one that belongs to a friend, that will work. Otherwise, you just have to learn to get a feel for the deck just by seeing a few sample cards, even by just viewing the box.

If you know the Rider-Waite deck well, you can usually recognize good reading decks, but even then, you can make mistakes if you cannot see the whole deck. I like to read with several different decks at psychic fairs and parties.

For awhile I collected decks, and I was sometimes fooled by the box. I do not read from decks that have only coins, cups, and so on, on the minor arcana. I’m very visual, so the numerology alone is not enough.

I used to give away useless decks if they were not compelling enough to keep as art decks. But I hate giving people decks that I think they will have a hard time reading, even though they like them.

Decks based on the Rider-Waite deck, though they can be innovative, and beautiful enough to collect for the art alone, are usually a safer bet. Some can be quite eccentric and still work for reading if you know the Rider-Waite well.

For example, the Alice in Wonderland tarot I bought some years ago is simply brilliant. It should not work, but it does—partly because the Alice story itself consists of subconscious, dream energy.

Which decks people can read from accurately and easily will vary somewhat. The thing they will all have in common is complex, subconsciously true and complete imagery, a complete symbol system that provides a vocabulary for the reader’s subconscious mind to speak to speak to the conscious mind.

So while a good reading deck will work for most readers, some decks may work for only a few readers. It is up to each reader to become skilled and experienced enough on standard decks to be able to recognize unusual decks that will also work for them.

Art Decks

For a discussion of art decks, tarot decks that are beautiful but not good for giving readings, see the first article in this series, Two Kinds of Tarot Decks: Part 1, Art Decks.


Two Kinds of Tarot Decks: Part 1, Art Decks

I usually tell new tarot students that there are two kinds of tarot decks: art decks and reading decks. I always advise people to learn the tarot initially from the Rider-Waite deck. More on that another time.

Art Decks

Some decks are so clearly designed for looks, strictly on a theme that has nothing to do with tarot, that they simply are not good for reading. Some are extremely beautiful and well worth collecting, but not to read from. There was a very beautiful Chinese tarot that came out about 20 years ago that, to me, fit into that category.

Art decks often have very little imagery, being completely focused on a theme. That is, they are beautiful but low on the symbolism that allows true reading decks to help you get information from your subconscious mind. They have lovely but completely irrelevant images that do not form a complete system or are incompatible to tarot.

Just because there are 78 cards, and the publisher calls it “tarot” doesn’t mean it is tarot. In some cases there are not even 78 cards, and there’s no relevance, the publisher still calls it “a tarot” in order to sell it.

I know there are those who will disagree. As one artist said, “It’s the reader, not the cards. I could read sugar bags.” And she could. But then, there are readers who do not use cards at all. So that proves nothing.

There is nothing wrong with creating tarot cards as art. But if you are starting out, trying to learn the tarot, you need to know that some decks you find attractive will not work for reading.

Perhaps later, when you are very skilled and experienced, you will be able to use such a deck, so buy it if you love it, but learn on the Rider-Waite.

Reading Decks

I’ll talk about reading decks in Two Kinds of Tarot Decks: Part 2. It is scheduled to be published on November 9.


Your Questions About Tarot Spreads

Susan asks…

I need to know more about tarot spreads?

Okay I have to write a short story for school and the story involves tarot cards. I have researched a lot on tarot cards but the only thing I still need to know are tarot spreads. Lets say a person randomly walks into a fortune teller’s shop and wants a tarot card reading. She doesn’t have any questions about anything she just wants a regular reading. So what spread would that be? how many cards would be dealt out?

TarotTrumps answers:

Different readers do it differently. They might start off with a simple 3-card spread, or a full 10-card “Celtic Cross” spread, or something else.

William asks…

When picking cards for a tarot spread, for which spreads to you fan the deck and choose?

Usually, I just pick from the top of the deck. Are there specific spreads that you have to fan the deck and choose the cards? When do you know which way to use?

TarotTrumps answers:

Basically, how do you pick cards to put in a spread?
You can shuffle, mix them up, cut them however you want, throw them. You don’t have to do something different for each spread.
Try using a couple ways and seeing which you like best.

Sharon asks…

Can I use tarot spreads for cartomancy?

I want to learn cartomancy. i dont know how to do it. is there spreads like tarot? do you use tarot spreads? also can i have a link to a site with the meanings of the cards? or are the meanings the same as the tarot minor arcana, if so please tell me the corresponding suit.

TarotTrumps answers:

You can definitely use tarot spreads for readings with regular playing cards. But there are spreads that have been developed for cartomancy. There are different techniques. Some use all 52 cards, others, like the Lenormand system use only 36. I found Secondhand-Souls-4occult.com by just doing a search on cartomancy. It has some basic info using all 52 cards and spreads.

I like Mlle. Lenormand’s Fortune Telling site (see link below) for learning some basics about Lenormand Oracle cards and their meanings. Although you can buy a deck with special pictures on it to help you remember the meanings, you can just use a regular playing deck and just remove the cards that are not used.

I wasn’t able to learn all I wanted from the Internet so I got “Fortune-Telling with Playing Cards” by Jonathan Dee, from the library. It gave me enough info to figure out what kind of cartomancy I wanted to learn more about. Plus it has meanings for the cards and suits as well as different spreads used with different card reading systems.

The meanings of the suits are not exactly the same as tarot. You can just read them as the same (Clubs=Wands; Spades=Swords; Hearts=Cups; Diamond=Pentacles) as long as you are consistent. That way your subconscious (or whatever you believe you’re working with when reading cards) knows what the symbols mean to you.

Powered by Yahoo! Answers


Your Questions About Rider-waite Tarot

John asks…

should i keep practicing using my tarot deck?

i bought 2 tarot decks and they are golden tarot & radiant rider-waite tarot deck. i bought the golden tarot becuz i like the images on the cards and i wanted ot learn how to use them,but i found the tarot to be difficult meaning the cards have to many meanings. the rider-waite has meanings but not that many and i found it easy to study then the golden tarot deck. i want to practice hard and be a good tarot reader one day. should i keep practicing.

TarotTrumps answers:

I think you should. You seem to enjoy the activity.

Skeptics can yammer on about tarot not being able to tell the future, but when you’re reading the tarot to yourself you’re conceptualizing the images and meanings of the cards and they are reflecting psychological aspects of your own mind (and hence behavior patterns) that may otherwise have remained unconscious.

And this can give you insights into how your own thoughts and behaviors may shape your future. So it really is a type of prophesying.

Mark asks…

Tarot Card Help~Can I bring them to school?

I have the Rider-Waite tarot deck. I read on a small article that I cannot leave them unattended which I have done so for about 2 days. Can I bring them to school?

TarotTrumps answers:

Psychic here

And tarot friend had the right idea… I really have never heard of a deck you could not leave unattended unless they were talking about you spending a lot of time imprinting on them.

I did want to bring up one fact and that is In the US you have rights that protect you against any form of discrimination especial religious beliefs and this falls in that category… If EVER you are told that you can not have your religious beliefs in school “Get a lawyer”

they can not tell a christian they must leave their bible at home, but I would assume that you should keep them put away in your bag, to keep from causing a distraction and you really do not want others to touch them.

I hope I was able to help in your search for answers
read my blog on tarot reading http://www.psychictarotreadings.net/reading-tarot-cards-correctly/

Linda asks…

Can you explain what’s the meaning of this Rider Waite Tarots?

I had did an Tarot reading on the Rider Waite Tarot deck on someones relationship. The Tarots that came out was Three of Wandsm, Five of Swords, Strength, Nine of Swords, Five of Pentacles, King of Pentacles and Seven of Pentacles. Can you explain the meaning of these tarots together? How is the relationship?

TarotTrumps answers:

The 3 of wands talks about having to go that next step in the relationship, the 5 of swords tell me that someone is making another person feel belittled and push around in a way. The strength card is talking about having that courage to face your fears. Next we have the Nine of Sword showing tenseness and sleepless nights. 5 of Pentacles feeling like there is no hope in sight. Then we come to the King of Pentacles, a king take control of his life he does not let other tell him how to rule, this is what must happen to bring balance. The last card show with some work things can get better and turn into something beautiful, but both people have to be on the same page.

Hope that helps

Powered by Yahoo! Answers


A Compressed Story to Tarot Cards and Translating Tarot Cards

The report of tarot cards started around the 15th century, a century after cards were introduced in Europe beginning with the rising municipals in Italy. The evolution of Tarot as we know it present has a array of stories and legends. The mystical superb of tarot cards intrigues historians, academics and spiritualists. Tarot cards were fundamental used as game divisions like regular decks, diverse from what we think of tarot cards today, although a quotation to Tarot as a set of devil cards was made in 1450. The habit of tarot cards started in Egypt, which is the same civilization that championed astrology.

The stylish tarot deck is separated into what is commonly called the major arcana or trump cards and minor arcane or suits of cards. The trump cards or major arcana consist of twenty two cards, every one of without suits. These include the fool, the Magician, the Empress, Justice, the Wheel of Fortune and others. The minor arcana consists of four suits of cards; swords, staves, cups and coins. Present, staves are generally named wands, but rods or batons are seen as well. Coins might be called disks or pentacles in some tarot decks.

Studying a tarot card is easy, as each trump card has a distinct meaning. After all, careful interpretation is needed if one wants to read the meaning from the group of cards. These cards show astrological connections with readings placed under the context of the Octavian Calendar. Tarot cards are considered to readily describe the physical and emotional peculiarities of the subject.

The rich and age-old tradition of tarot translating is constantly expanding through time. The methods of interpreting tarot cards continue to change to catch up with the ideas it is living in. The change in meaning may also contribute to the evolution of the card itself. The essential features of a tarot card nowadays are far variant from what it was previous.

When card readings are conducted face-to-face, the card reader will at intervals ask the querent to shuffle the cards as they concentrate on the question. The querent will from time to time be asked to split the deck into three piles, and then to put the deck back together again. The card reader then lays out the cards in a specific pattern, and each card has a various meaning, depending upon the layout used. For example, the card reader might layout three cards, one to signify the old lang syne, one for the present and one for the outcome: every one of three cards together give a impregnated interpretation of a given situation.

Phone readings are available on the Internet for approximately £5.00 per translating. Perhaps it is significantly cheaper than face to face readings due to the lack of mystique and personal/visual connection with the reader himself. While the days gone by presented interested parties with the option of calling a phone line, the Internet now offers international calls for the same price, and if one is interested, one may acquire a reading through credit card of PayPal.

The well-liked character of phone readings is that the impersonal nature of the transaction weakens the link, although this may also be attributed to the absence of mystique from the service.

Although tarot is labeled something that is as accurate as astrology, there is still a growing tarot service market that is ever increasing through new mediums. Per contra, purists still think that a face to face tarot reading is important. It is also important to note that tarot cards are not purely divinatory devices. They are also used in many countries as cards used for playing. This alone should encourage tarot card users to keep a level head.

Doris Trebescyh is a marvelous psychic and can contact angels. She offers angel phone readings, can contact personal spiritual guardian angels and do angel card cell phone readings.
Article Source


Your Questions About Rider-waite Tarot

Mark asks…

Aside from the Rider-Waite Tarot, are there other decks that reversed the “Justice” and “Strength” cards?

How do you feel about working with a deck that is not in the original order?
Jamie D – Your comments have nothing to do with the question.

TarotTrumps answers:

8 = Justice 11 = Strength
Acea Gypsy
Aiitalia
Arcanes du Destin
Glass
Lover’s
Astro

8 = Strength 11 = Justice
Rider Waite
De Laurance
Odell
Ravenwood Eastern
Aquarian
Astral
Native American

There is no provable origin of the numbers. Like Cooper’s many of the very old decks have no numbering of the Great Arcana. The Cooper deck and a few others have no numbers at all. The numbers have no influence to my knowledge.unless you are playing some of the card games wherein tarot decks are used.

Helen asks…

Where can I buy Rider-Waite tarot cards?

Do you know of a store (bookstore etc) where I can buy these tarot cards? I’d rather buy them in a store than online.

TarotTrumps answers:

Pretty much every book store I’ve ever been to has them. Even the mainstream bookstores like Borders and the already mentioned B&N.
I own about 50 decks (I collect them). And I’ve bought most of them on amazon.com.

Nancy asks…

TAROT – how can i read zodiac signs in the rider-waite deck?

i read tarot from my rider-waite deck, and i read once that you could read zodiac signs according to how many cup cards, or sword cards, etc. you get in succession. i’m not entirely sure, though. please help

TarotTrumps answers:

Here is a list of correspondences:

http://www.billheidrick.com/works/tarottbl.htm

It’s at the bottom of the page. The zodiac correspondences are those used by the Golden Dawn.

Powered by Yahoo! Answers


Your Questions About the Tarot Suit of Cups

Sharon asks…

The Tarot is confusing the hell out of me.?

I purchased a deck of Tarot cards. This particular deck is of a Celtic theme. But the instructions are very unclear, so I’m wondering, do you have to abide by a deck’s theme for it to work properly?

In each deck that I know of, you get four suits (wands, swords, cups, coins) and a Fool, Magician, High Priestess, Empress, Emperor, Hierophant, Lovers, Chariot, Strength, Hermit, Wheel of Fortune, Justice, Hanged Man, Death, Temperance, Devil, Tower, Star, Moon, Sun, Judgement, and World cards.

So if they’re all the same cards, why should the meanings differ? DO they differ?

TarotTrumps answers:

Just so you know, some books on the Tarot give a lot of mumbo-jumbo that isn’t true.

Back in the 18th century, someone in France wrote a book about the Tarot, and tied it in with the then-popular Egyptian craze. He explained everything in the Tarot deck in terms of Egyptian religion, and told about religious rites that were performed in the pyramids–but *he made it all up.*

A year or two later, the Rosetta Stone was translated, and everything that guy wrote about the Tarot was shown to be false. The pyramids turned out to be tombs, not temples; the “Gypsies” are not from Egypt; and the Tarot cards do not retain the Egyptian religion for the Gypsies in symbolic form. It’s all a crock.

The truth is that when Marco Polo returned from China, he brought back with him playing cards; the Chinese loved all sorts of card games. Playing cards then became fashionable in Italy, and one of the card games was known as Tarocchi. The tarot deck is the deck of cards that was used to play the game.

And regular playing cards are almost identical: Instead of 4 suits of 13 cards each, the Tarot has 4 suits of 14 cards each (instead of Jack, Queen, and King, it has Page, Knight, Queen and King). Hearts are Cups, Diamonds are Pentacles (or Coins), Spades are Swords, and Clubs are Rods (or Wands). The other cards have all disappeared, with the exception of the Fool, which has turned into the Joker.

Somewhere along the line, somebody got the idea of using the cards to tell fortunes. It’s all very Jungian, all about synchronicity, but there is no spiritual value in the cards at all, except for what you yourself allow them to have. Just think of the card deck used in “Old Maid:” Almost every pair of cards (in some decks) is an archetype or stereotype.

For that matter, you could use Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs: Snow White, Sneezy, Dopey, Bashful, Grumpy, Happy, Sleepy, and Doc. They’re all eight of them archetypes, too.

Having said all that, I used to have two people do Tarot readings for me. The one person was a very precise and orderly person, and would tell me what every card meant in every deck he knew of; his readings were not of “the future,” but instead told me what was going on in my spiritual life–very accurately. The other person’s readings, though, were quite different–they tended to be less about what was going on in my head, and more about what he wanted to see.

Thomas asks…

Can you help me interpret my tarot reading cards?

Hello there,

I got eight of cups, the Star, ten of pentacles, death, three of swords.

I have been unemployed for the past five months, and I am thinking of either setting my foot with some commission-based financial group or leave the country all together to the country whom I worked there last year, and I still have my contacts in that country.

Though I am reading for some exam for that commision-based job, but my heart is go back, and just establish myself there.

So what are the cards telling me? Any advise there?

Also, when I do my swords suit reading, I always get – four of swords- pertaining to recuperation……and I have been at home for a long time, so what is the point of relaxing or recuperating when I was recharging all along, maybe mentally?

Info to add.

Eight of cups is regeneration. When something has run its course and it is time to move on. (I guess advice to leave the country or town)

Ten of pentacles. I have in the book it says about investment whether intellectually, business or relationship wise.

But I have the death card right after it? what does that suppose to mean?

And after the death card I have three of swords, which is tension released. Refers to a dissapointment , saddness, however joy and saddness do come from the same origin. so after saddness maybe joy can come after?!

I can linke the eight of cups and the star.

However ten of pent. then death then three of swods…….hhhhmmmmm?

TarotTrumps answers:

Consider this with the cards…

8 of Cups – a conscious decision on your part to reject a situation in front of you and walk away.

10 of Pentacles – an investment in yourself and possibly a company. Means a lot of hard work. Look for a family name associated with the businesses you are considering.

Death – means change and transformation as a result of personal sacrifice, which brings into your life a renewal, rebirth or new start. Which position calls to you spiritually?

3 of Swords – sorrow which could come from separation from what you know and is familiar to you. An ending in the present for a new life in the near future. There is also a caution not to out-think yourself or over analyze.

Star – new beginnings, a new start.

There is a lot of emotion surrounding your cards (and your decision). Try to be gentle on yourself in choosing.

Blessings and Good Fortune to you

James asks…

I just found my old deck of tarot cards, help with suits?

I have the Fairy Tarot Deck by Lo Scarabeo … The suits are Acorns, Hearts, Leaves and Bells… What would they be in a normal deck? Like which symbol would be the sword, which would be the cups etc…

Where could I get a copy of the instruction booklet? Or can I just go by the meanings of the numbers and suits of a regular deck when reading this one?

Also, I need a good site for learning all about tarot. Thanks :)

I am a beginner. I am going to use a standard guide, but I just needed to double-check the suits, as I don’t want to learn them wrong.
Arizona wins :)

Thanks dear!

TarotTrumps answers:

I am not familiar with the Fairy Tarot. My guess on the suits would be Acorn = wants, Hearts = cups, Leaves = swords, and Bells = pentacles (coins).

You might try Lo Scarabeo’s website for more info. However, if y9u know/understand the tarot, it is quite possible to do good readings intuitively with an off-beat or unusual deck. Even if you do not know the tarot but simply will allow yourself to be guided by intuition, you can do pretty good readings without the book that comes with the deck.

I must warn you, though, that if you start out reading intuitively, and you later read the booklet that comes with the deck, you may just get confused and find it harder to read with that deck…at least for awhile. If you are reading intuitively without the book, and getting good results, you may want to stick with that.

Alternatively if you read a book or two on general readings, based on the Rider-Waite, that may help you get started.

I hope that helps. Best of luck!

Powered by Yahoo! Answers


Reading Tarot Cards – a Comprehensive Approach

Reading tarot cards is a pastime that has been done centuries ago, which determines possible outcomes and predictions of the future.  A tarot deck can come in different themes but is basically made up of the twenty-two major arcana cards and the fifty six minor arcana.  Since the early Christian European era, tarot reading was already being done and is still being practiced by aspiring and professional tarot readers today.

I personally have a Pythagorean deck, which differs from other decks as it has mathematical backgrounds incorporated with the cards’ meanings. Each card has its own meaning depending on how the tarot reader interprets the formation of the cards. But despite the difference in deck, reading tarot cards is done by interpreting the images or pictures that dominate the entire body of the card.

In reading tarot cards, the cards are placed in a formation called “spreads” which will allow the reader to predict a certain aspect of a person’s life.  Commonly used spreads include the Celtic spread, the horseshoe spread, 3-card spread, 1-card spread, the astrological spread, and the teractycs wherein ten cards are arranged in a four-rowed pyramid.  There are many other spreads aside from these which the tarot reader can use and arrange his cards the way he sees it fit. 

(more…)


The History of Tarot Cards

Ever hear of tarocchi or tarock cards? These were some of the names of card games believed to have evolved into today’s Tarot cards. What is out of the ordinary is that no one seems to know the true history of Tarot cards which becomes a mystery in itself. For one thing, its origin has never been proven but only assumed.

Several versions of possible Tarot appear in different locations and centuries. To a certain extent, all may be valid to the progressing history of Tarot or just coincidental theories. Tarot cards are said to have originated in China more than 3000 years ago. It is fact that playing card games in tile and card forms were known and always popular among the Chinese. This theory can be strengthened that the original origin of Tarot may very well have been developed in China based upon playing cards showing up for the first time and being used in Italy in the 15th century. How could they come from China to Italy? This was the same time frame when Marco Polo returned from China.

It is speculated by some to forget the China link. The earliest set of Tarot known was solely created in Northern Italy during the 15th century. The Tarot began as a card game called tarocchi and soon spread to France and across the rest of Europe. It was not associated with fortune telling except through gypsies accused of witchcraft. In 1859, witchcraft trials took place in Venice documenting that a form of cards (possibly Tarot) were used for fortunetelling.

(more…)