Least Trumps

by Belle Waring on April 21, 2015

I mentioned a little while ago that I had an excellent plan for a project. I have always wanted to make my own Tarot deck, since I was a young teenager. Well, I say this, but probably since I was nine or ten. At the time I imagined that I would have to successfully pull a wood-block print for all the backs, and paint each one, perfectly, all 78, and then if a drop of water got on them later? I would die. So I imagined having them laminated, but then I considered the state of much-used laminated papers such as those employed in classes, and I thought it unwise to entrust to the process anything about which I cared greatly. Yellowing, bubbling, peeling; these are all terrible. Now many things exist which can facilitate my devising of a deck of cards, such as the use of photoshop to create perfectly symmetrical arabesques for the reverses based on only one properly-inked section. But of course the infinitely more pleasing prospect is that of getting my designs printed on card stock, and the edges trimmed, and then all shared with others! I had only ever intended my own version of the designs in the Waite-Smith deck,* but then I remembered that I had had another idea, which was to make a set of cards based on Great-Aunt Nora Cloud’s deck in John Crowley’s Little, Big. Truly it’s Violet’s deck, but we see it used by Nora Cloud in the course of the book. (Violet is my younger daughter’s name; mine can be her deck also.) Those who have read the book will know that the deck, its reading, and physical disposition figure greatly in the work, and those of you who have not SHOULD GO READ IT NOW DEAR GOD READ LITTLE, BIG FOR THE FIRST TIME I ENVY YOU! Really, it’s maybe my single favourite book.

UPDATED below

In researching for the project online, I found some material, such as this set of interviews with Crowley on the 25th anniversary of the publication of Little, Big. One of the interviewers, Jodi Snyder, has had a life-long interest in Tarot, and is naturally fascinated with this aspect. Crowley says something rather unexpected, to me: “to tell you the truth, I knew next to nothing about Tarot when I began the book, and know not much more now.” John and I agreed we would have guessed he had researched everything about Tarot for ages. The feature of Violet’s deck that makes it different from normal decks is that there are what Nora Cloud calls “Least Trumps” in place of the ‘greater trumps’ or Major Arcana. The ordinary Major Arcana go from 0 to XXI as follows
0 (The Fool)/ I (The Magician)/ II (The High Priestess)/ III (The Empress)/ IV (The Emperor)/ V (The Hierophant)/ VI (The Lovers)/ VII (The Chariot)/ VIII (Strength)/ IX (The Hermit)/ X (Wheel of Fortune)/ XI (Justice)/ XII (The Hanged Man)/ XIII (Death)/ XIV (Temperance)/ XV (The Devil)/ XVI (The Tower)/ XVII (The Star)/ XVIII (The Moon)/ XIX (The Sun)/ XX (Judgement)/ XXI (The World)
According to Snyder, Violet’s deck contains the following (in order mentioned in the text; pages refer to HarperCollins Edition; this list itself is a quote):
“The Traveller, page 19 (card described)
The Journey, 19
The Sun, 19
The Host, 19
The Bundle, 75
The Secret, 92
Convenience, 112
Multiplicity, 112
The Sportsman/PISCATOR, 112 (card described)
The Cousin, 157
The Gift, 157
The Stranger, 157
The Vista, 157 (card described on 158)
Seed, 158
The Knot, 252
The Fool, 253 (card described)
The Banquet, 262 (card described on 263)
[And the following are strongly hinted at via internal monologue:]
Generation, p. 175
Silence, 373
Circumspection, 373”
However, this is quite wrong, as we can see easily from reading the section describing the first cards.

And just then a woman on a porch at Edgewood far away turned a trump called the Journey. There was the Traveler, pack on his back and stout stick in his hand, and the long and winding road before him to traverse; and the Sun too, though whether setting or rising she had never decided. Beside the cards’ unfolding pattern, a brown cigarette smoldered in a saucer. She moved the saucer and put the Journey in its place in the pattern, then turned the next card. It was the Host.

It’s clear from this description that the singular card the Journey (or Via, rather, as we know the Sportsman actually reads “Piscator”) depicts a traveler, and a long road before him, and a sun either departing from or approaching the horizon. For a single card follows (Hospes); Nora has not turned up four cards: first the Journey, then the Traveler, then the Sun, then the Host. Or she would have needed to move the saucer before, for one thing. It is very odd that Snyder should misread it in this way. Now, it is true that there is a card ‘the Traveler,’ as it is mentioned elsewhere, but I think there cannot be a Sun, or how would this make sense?

This was the difficulty. Like the usual deck, Violet’s contained a set of twenty-one major trumps, but hers–persons, places, things, notions–were not the Greater Trumps at all. And so when the Bundle, or the Traveler, or Convenience, or Multiplicity, or the Sportsman fell, a leap had to be made, meanings guessed at which made sense of the spread. Over the years, with growing certainty, she had assigned meanings to her trumps, made inferences from the way in which they fell among the cups and swords and wands, and discerned–or seemed to discern–their influences, malign or beneficient. Death, the Moom, Judgment–those Greater Trumps had large and obvious significance; what did one make though of the Sportsman?

If the Moon is so Great a Trump as to fall outside the compass of the deck, surely the Sun is as well.

Another difference between an ordinary deck and Violet’s is that there are only 52 cards in the suit section. A Tarot deck has four suits: wands (also clubs in some Italian decks), cups (or hearts), swords (spades), pentacles (diamonds or coins), ranging from Ace to ten as ‘pip’ cards, and with the interpellation of a Knight between the Page/Knave and the Queen of the ‘court’ cards. In discussions with Eigenblick, Ariel Hawskquill says there are only 52 suit cards. Great-Aunt Cloud says there are 21 Least Trumps, numbered 0-20. Thus I must eject…my knights, I suppose. It’s better thus, as the pages can stand for Querents of either sex. And yet I have drawn the knights of Wands and Swords already, because I haven’t checked my notes in some time. And they are quite nice. Hmph. I was going to include samples but John suggested I wait till they are all done.

As to style, I had always wanted to do brilliant color, using watercolor paints, but yielding something more like gouache. It was heart-rending to re-read and learn that they are monochrome, “weird minatory images…engraved with dense black detail like Dürer’s, baroque and Germanic…” I had a difficult night. Am I likely to make two full sets of Tarot in my life? And yet what would be the point if I didn’t do them as in the book? And it will take less time. But my colors! Zoë counselled going forth with black ink only, and so I have done, but drawn in my usual style or something like it, and of varying images. So I thought I would ask you all, do you have any good ideas for Multiplicity? The gift I have done already; it’s the box of hash George Mouse found at the Old Law Farm, with a Gothic stained-glass-window behind it depicting the Three Kings.

UPDATE: The funny thing is that I was sure Crowley had done his research and so I at first assumed Violet had an deck of the kind available in the 1880s, the Marseilles deck, or an Italian one. These decks of “Tarocchi” are all the predecessors of our “ordinary” playing cards and thus some have 52 suit cards as modern decks do, absent, as I said, the knight. Then I read on and they are specifically said to have come from what is now Prague in the 1400s. With his ignorance and imagination Crowley created a very historically plausible set of cards—see these. Like, eerily historically plausible, to the point that it is downright fey.

I am not doing them quite like this, though, but rather as I would normally do an inked line illustration, with the addition/change of large lines which go only in one direction, parallel to one another to indicate shading or curves (as well as ordinary cross-hatching) where I would normally have insanely tiny cross-hatching with the .003 Copix. It successfully gives them a medieval look. I am also putting in people of different races from all over the world in traditional dress, just because that was always my goal for “my” Tarot deck. I have quite a nice young samurai for the Knight of Swords now though and what will I do with him? Likewise, my Knight of Clubs has such a lovely, fore-shortened horse, and horses are hard (though naturally as a girl I have lots of practice, having drawn them daily between the ages of three and…thirteen, perhaps.) Why did I fail to refer to my notes, like, ever? I can have two Knights and two Pages, I suppose. But I wanted to make the Pages very beautiful, and with long hair, so that they are truly of indeterminate gender and the younger Querent will have a good representative card be they girl or boy. I liked the Page of Swords well enough as a child, but it was clear I was being represented but hastily. My brother, meanwhile, has had three full cards for his life: Page, Knight, King. Both these Knights I have drawn are long-haired and pretty, but too-masculine of face for this to work? Perhaps I can genderqueer the face and figures a bit? But the mounted wand-bearer rather must be an Eques, if you see what I mean. Better to add another wand and make him a pip card. Oh duh, six of Wands. Prizzoblem. Sizzolved.

*It is usually called the Rider-Waite deck but should really be called the Waite-Smith deck; Pamela Colman Smith was the artist who drew up the illustrations under particular instructions from her fellow member of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn A.E. Waite. Rider was just the publisher.

{ 38 comments }

1

AcademicLurker 04.21.15 at 3:22 pm

Little, Big is awesome. As is Aegypt, which gets bonus points for introducing me to Frances Yates.

I couldn’t really get into the later installments in the series though.

From <iLittle, Big I always liked Ariel Hawksquill. Too bad she ended up stuck in the body of a…duck? Swan? Some sort of bird, I think.

2

Theophylact 04.21.15 at 3:39 pm

I (and many others) are eagerly awaiting the 25th Anniversary Edition of Little, Big, and have been for many years. (At the moment the link is down.)

3

Belle Waring 04.21.15 at 3:46 pm

Stork.

4

Henry 04.21.15 at 4:46 pm

Really, it’s maybe my single favourite book.

Mine too – every time I see a copy in a used book store, I buy it so that when I next find a suitable person, I can pass it on. Some (Kieran, I think) are immune to the infection. Indeed the first time I read it, I bounced right off it (it was the second, third and fourth readings where it started to come together). Elizabeth Hand has a Least Trumps story too, which gives them a feminist edge. And Gene Wolfe has a story in Strange Travelers, The Haunted Boardinghouse, (perhaps the only really first rate Wolfe story in that volume) that refracts Edgewood in strange Wolfian ways through something a little like Peace.

5

L2P 04.21.15 at 4:48 pm

“Beside the cards’ unfolding pattern…”

Doesn’t this mean that there was more than one card next to teh saucer before she moved it and drew the Host?

Little, Big is amazing. I wish I could have kept up with the Aegypt series.

6

NickS 04.21.15 at 5:50 pm

Just as an FYI — you might be interested to look at this deck of Tarot cards currently on kickstarter.

It’s very different from your idea but (a) it’s interesting to see what a hand-designed, commercially printed tarot deck can look like (b) all the art is hand-painted using gouache (and highly-stylized; I mostly like it), (c) they’re drawing on something other than the Rider-Waite (or Waite-Smith) deck. They say it is “based on the early, Marseilles tarot from the 1700’s”

7

P.D. Magnus 04.21.15 at 7:36 pm

It’s self-serving of me to say so, but people interested in this sort of thing might also enjoy the Decktet. It’s the rabbit hole I went down when doing a tarot-inspired art project.

8

John Garrett 04.21.15 at 8:03 pm

Thanks, Belle – loved LITTLE, BIG loved AEGYPT perhaps more. Got to stick to it, but ten years after few books stick with me so well. Don’t know who else out there casts the deck: I’ve been reading Tarot for close friends for twenty years or more, and it’s always terrifying and then — no word for it.

JG

9

Anderson 04.21.15 at 8:14 pm

Henry: glad to hear that, I will try it again. (I tend to lose books when a chapter begins, “now, never mind the characters you have been caring about; three generations later ….”)

Belle, I had never heard of “Pixie,” unless I forgot a reference in a Yeats bio. Thanks for the pointer.

10

Matt 04.21.15 at 10:10 pm

I had just read the headline and was going to hope for an opportunity to mention Little, Big in the comments. Then I read the post and see that’s what this is about. What a happy day!

Grandfather Trout might work as a card image, for the multiplicity of children he fathered. It doesn’t work if you don’t know the story though. Or the multiple architectural faces of the Drinkwater house, though that’s a bit much to fit on a card. I always pictured the cards with illustrations in rich colors like Tiffany glass; apparently my imagination refused to be bound by the text.

11

max 04.22.15 at 1:38 am

It’s clear from this description that the singular card the Journey (or Via, rather, as we know the Sportsman actually reads “Piscator”) depicts a traveler, and a long road before him, and a sun either departing from or approaching the horizon.

So it’s one card (‘Via’) named in English Journey, with the Traveler on it, and the (lowercase) sun. Given those elements, that jumped out at me as very obviously being a different version of the Fool card. Look at the Rider-Waite-Smith deck – a traveler with a bundle on a stick under the sun. Just for contrast check out these trumps from a version of the Minchiate, particularly the Il Matto card.

I’ve never read the book (sorry, kill me), but if the guy doesn’t know much about the tarot, then very likely he snagged a deck (probably Rider-Waite) and more or less re-imagined/re-described the existing trumps. If it were me and I was trying to duplicate his images (?) I’d take the book and go through it and figure out which Lesser Trumps corresponded to which cards of the major arcana. Then you rework them following the book descriptions of the actual drawings. It seems likely otherwise that you’d go crazy with frustration trying to figure it out.

Just going by the names, Multiplicity is probably The World, the Stranger is probably the Hermit, Piscator might be Strength, Silence is probably Death, the Gift is probably the Star, etc.

As to style, I had always wanted to do brilliant color, using watercolor paints, but yielding something more like gouache. It was heart-rending to re-read and learn that they are monochrome, “weird minatory images…engraved with dense black detail like Dürer’s, baroque and Germanic…” I had a difficult night. Am I likely to make two full sets of Tarot in my life? And yet what would be the point if I didn’t do them as in the book?

Do you think the author drew a tarot deck? The deck is imaginary and only exists in the reader’s head. This guy just used the cards as part of his (written) collage, and as such, the descriptions were undoubtedly bent to fit the story at hand, so you can do it any way you want. (However, from the description, you could do ‘engraved with dense black detail’ with color, which sounds a lot like the deck I linked above. But it seems likely to be quite difficult.)

There are any number of decks floating around which follow (and flout) Rider-Waite-Smith and others, and you (and the author) are essentially doing the exact same thing, so there’s no real template to work off of, except your own imagination and desires.

max
[‘That moment of fandom panic…’]

12

Belle Waring 04.22.15 at 3:14 am

maaaaax. Don’t you think I thought about this? I thought about this. Crowley would have come up with the correct number of court cards, for one thing. He also describes a number of the Least Trumps exactly and there is nothing corresponding to the Banquet–rather it seems like an illustration of the table at the Mad Hatter’s tea party after everyone has gone, plus something else. No. There is a card corresponding to the Fool, with a man crossing a stream–he is a knight in heavy plate armour in the process of falling off his horse, a scallop shell in one hand, and a link of sausages in the other. He represents the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, and the fool also. The funny thing is that I was sure Crowley had done his research and at first thought that Violet had an old deck of the kind available in the 1880s, the Marseilles deck, or an Italian one. These are all the predecessors of our “ordinary” playing cards and thus some have 52 suit cards as modern decks do, nixing, as I said, the knight. Then I realised they are specifically said to have come from what is now Prague in the 1400s. With his ignorance and imagination he created a very historically plausible set of cards—see these. I am hoisting this to the bottom of the post also so that other people will see it.

13

Belle Waring 04.22.15 at 3:15 am

Oh, well, and obviously I know I could just make them any way I wanted; I just wanted them to be as described. I am making Silence be for The Hermit etc.

14

Belle Waring 04.22.15 at 3:17 am

L2P: it sounds like she’s making a Horseshoe pattern and there are already some cards out.

15

ZM 04.22.15 at 3:53 am

I think you should not do them from the book (which I have not read) but your own images for the meanings of the cards with the bright colors that you like.

I do not know if it is a good idea or not though. I read tarot cards when I was young and it was hard to read my own but I was usually okay at reading others’. However I think tarot may only be of use in near term predictions as my sense is everything is up in the air at the moment. I have unfortunately had too many uncanny experiences to think it is a thing to play with or try to thwart or alter fates. Just in terms of CT in early 2006 I was given a book by Francis Spufford who I had never heard of before called The Child That Books Built , and there I was last year pleading with him to crusade against the City of London after he joked about Ruritania.

16

Belle Waring 04.22.15 at 4:12 am

My mom always cast Tarot when I was young but not much lately. I got John to buy me a deck and I realize I’m afraid to use them for anything because they are so new so I will have to…ask them unimportant questions for a long time until they become worn? My great- and great-great-grandmothers were “spiritualists” who went around staying at different people’s country estates turning tables etc., I thought I would post about it next. A humorous occupation for people who are not characters in a novel.

17

John Garrett 04.22.15 at 2:10 pm

For me casting Tarot isn’t about predicting the future, which I would have no idea how to do with or without the cards. It’s about something else, hard to describe in words: it’s about finding the details in the entirety of a person’s life and experience and loves and conflicts and…that are hard to see close up. When it works it takes all of life, now, and like a black light illuminates the hard to see. Sort of.

18

John Garrett 04.22.15 at 2:14 pm

Just pulled my Rider deck out of the drawer and riffled through it for the first time in a couple years. One card stayed in the box: death.

JG

19

Ian 04.22.15 at 5:05 pm

In lieu of laminate, you could just sleeve them…

https://maydaygames.com/card-sleeves.html

Of course some people may feel like that ruins their interaction with the cards, but if it’s that or nothing…

20

Marshall 04.22.15 at 10:38 pm

My Dad took LSD and got off into all that stuff. Weird in the technical sense. The thing is it’s all about interpretation, not the magical power of the physical object, although the object may have educational, artistic or provenancal value. So all cards are cards, which is why we use them for “games of chance”. Once I made a system using an ordinary deck (with a joker) and a solitaire game to iterate a layout. The semantics were ordinary psychological numerolgy (as, “one is the loneliest number”) with an attempt to recover the original symbols for the suits: swords, cups, stars, and rods. It worked pretty well, too, meaning that I could give myself interesting readings.

21

Belle Waring 04.23.15 at 4:48 am

“My Dad took LSD and got off into all that stuff. ”
I think that was actually mandatory for a few years. Some fucked up shit from a friend’s organic chemistry lab in California (flown to the East Coast along with a pharmacopeia of prescription uppers and downers in a small prop plane) once had my mom tripping for three days. I was a baby. She had to take care of a baby, even with the wheels within wheels of fire, etc. She said when she woke up tripping on the third day she was pretty fucking pissed off at Seabird (for such was his monicker. He was my father’s best childhood friend but he died when I was still a child).

I can imagine a system based on the ordinary deck would be fine. I’ve always thought it interesting that our gaming cards came out of the full deck and not the other way around. I think for this deck I’ll have to make it, mess with it for a while, and then write the key. BUT IT WILL BE SO FUN. I am enjoying it.

22

ZM 04.23.15 at 5:41 am

“The thing is it’s all about interpretation, not the magical power of the physical object, ”

Once I knew a forensic psychiatrist who was a hobbyist astrologist. I talked to him once at a party about whether his knowledge from psychiatry was how he drew his readings from astrology, he said no it was different. At another party he said I could be a constitutional lawyer due to me being grumpy in a pedantic manner. He was the first person I knew who was very seriously concerned about climate change, not in the way I was which was more for a decade “oh all the trees in the bush are turning brown and dropping their branches and dying in this long long drought”.

So I think it is objects and interpretations, not just interpretations. But often the objects are first realised as significant and then only later you understand the interpretations more as things foretold transpire .

I read an interview with John Ashbery once and he said he argued with his therapist as he thought his poems were a kind of clairvoyancy, and the therapist thought they were psychological.

23

Taj 04.23.15 at 12:41 pm

The first passage to come to mind for “multiplicity”:

Daily Alice liked cats, as her mother hadn’t, and as Auberon grew up the number of cats in the house grew by geometrical progression. They lay in heaps before the fireplaces, their airborne down coated the furniture and the rugs as though with a dry and permanent hoarfrost, their self-possessed small demon faces looked out at Auberon from the oddest places. There was a calico tiger whose striped pelt made fierce false eyebrows above her eyes, two blacks or three, a white with discrete and complex black patches, like a melting chessboard. On cold nights Auberon would awake oppressed, toss within his bedclothes, and displace two or three compact dense bodies out of a deep enjoyment.

24

SusanC 04.23.15 at 2:30 pm

engraved with dense black detail like Dürer’s, baroque and Germanic

That description suggests that they are most probably monochrome (like Dürer’s woodcuts and copper engravings)., but they possibly could be like Japanese woodblock prints, with all the line work in black but with areas filled with solid colour. (For Japanese prints, there is one printing block for the black and then a separate block for each colour). Of course, you’re probably going to actually make them with modern printing technology, like a colour laser printer, but the imaginary deck you’re imitating presumably had to be made with earlier technology, and so is subject to its limitations.

P.S. I’m curious about how you’re going to turn the artwork into cards. Laserprint them on card and then cut to size with a craft knife? That way, the front and back of the card probably won’t be aligned exactly — so you could make the backs so that they are slightly larger than needed (“full bleed”) and have a pattern that will still look OK if it moved left/right or up/down by a millimetre or two).

25

SusanC 04.23.15 at 2:59 pm

From the interview by Jodi Snyder:

CROWLEY: It’s actually a quite precise description of a painting by Arthur Rackham, called By the Way, showing the traveler and the little row of mushrooms. But I’ll accept it as a card too.

So the Arthur Rackham print exists in the world of the fiction. but not as a card. Crowley’s willingness to “accept it as a card” suggests that the cards’ style might be Rackham-esque, as well as Durer-esque. A Rackham-like style would also fit with “dense black detail like Dürer’s, baroque and Germanic”, if they’re like Rackham’s illustrations for Wagner’s Ring Cycle, or for the fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm.

26

Marshall 04.23.15 at 6:03 pm

My dad did his at SRI, where he worked. There was an elaborate psychiatric protocol, with observers taking notes, very pure stuff I’m sure. He spent months writing up the annotated narrative. Later he moved out and did a whole shamanism thing in a super-synthetic way, also i ching, scientology, etc. Don’t believe he did any more drugs to speak of, except whiskey.

I read once that many don’t pay enough attention to the suit cards, the trumps are so gaudy. And there are so much more suit cards, more bricks to make patterns. Personally, the trumps are individually interesting but kinda standalone stakes in the ground, not clear to me what can be done with them. I did have the joker … ignoti et quasi occulti sort of thing.

27

Roland Stone 04.23.15 at 8:27 pm

Belle, I wonder if reading Dummett http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2658254-game-of-tarot would be useful for background? (After mucking through one or two of his philosophical papers, I have dissuaded myself from even trying him on Tarot.)

28

jgtheok 04.23.15 at 10:04 pm

Interesting project, Belle. Even ignoring the trumps, lots of scope in the suit cards to get creative. For a now-disenfranchised samurai, perhaps the 5 or 6 of Swords?

Clearly, I need to read Little, Big at some point…

29

Belle Waring 04.24.15 at 2:46 am

Ha! Putting it like that jgtheok he is a ronin and should indeed be on V of swords, with the swords of others as well as his own, and they slinking away on the shore ignominiously. I have always found the triumphant fellow a little cruel-looking, though, and my knight is quite nice. (I cast in and got it reversed in the final card for a big project of mine recently and was like, noooooo!!! Do not obstruct my beach you smirking triumphant dude! I never do it normally I just was inspired to because I was thinking of them.) That’s OK, the card will just mean something different then.
SusanC: starting an illustration project with the premise, “sooo, I’ll just draw like Arthur Rackham, then” is not a recipe for mental health or ever finishing even one card to your satisfaction. Though it’s a reasonable interpretation. ^_^
Roland: Dummett on Tarot?! Oookaay.

30

JakeB 04.24.15 at 3:17 am

Okay, I went to my local library’s website to see if they have that Dummett book that Roland Stone mentions above. No, but there is one listing for the movie The Crimson Petal and the White, because I just searched for ‘Dummett’ and one of the producers is Greg Dummett. So who cares, except the blurb says ‘In 1870s London, a prostitute known as Sugar sees a potential way out of the brothel she works for when she is taken in by William Rackham, the son of a wealthy businessman.’

Coincidence???

31

Belle Waring 04.24.15 at 10:52 am

Taj: that is a GREAT idea.
JakeB: that is funny indeed.

32

SusanC 04.24.15 at 12:15 pm

@29. That was my thought too. The two artists mentioned in the text + the author interviews (Durer and Rackham) were really, really good. I wish I could draw even half as well as they could. Or even a quarter as well. Still, it’s an indication of which artistic genre and technique Crowley had in mind.

33

Collin Street 04.24.15 at 12:18 pm

That description suggests that they are most probably monochrome (like Dürer’s woodcuts and copper engravings)., but they possibly could be like Japanese woodblock prints, with all the line work in black but with areas filled with solid colour. (For Japanese prints, there is one printing block for the black and then a separate block for each colour).

Or they could be hand-tinted woodcuts. Cheap technology: the human eye processes light/dark information at a higher resolution than colour information, so if your colours are blurry or you paint outside the line the brain will pull the colour back into shape before you notice it. Most older folk/popular art woodcuts would have been designed for hand-tinting, playing cards in particular.

[Japanese woodcuts aren’t hand-tinted, because the ink was painted onto the woodblocks; this is how they get gradient effects.]

Of course, you’re probably going to actually make them with modern printing technology, like a colour laser printer, but the imaginary deck you’re imitating presumably had to be made with earlier technology, and so is subject to its limitations.

On that note: the image from a laser printer is a plastic film that’s made from powder like a sand mandela and then sintered into the substrate; this means it’s kinda shiny. Often shinier than the paper. Pale colours and black lines are usually OK, but areas of stronger — particularly darker — colours can present some design problems.

34

ZM 04.24.15 at 12:54 pm

Maybe you could make synthetic wood blocks with a 3D printer and print from them?

I like the idea of all the different folk costumes. It reminds me a bit of woodblock prints at the time of westernisation/modernisation so there are prints of Japanese ladies with sewing machines and things.

35

Belle Waring 04.25.15 at 2:49 am

Singapore is where many of the books you own were printed–go look. I’ll have them printed and cut here. She said confidently. Naw, but for real they have AMAZING printers.

36

Mike Schilling 04.25.15 at 3:08 am

The other (awesome) book the Tarot brings to mind is Tim Powers’s Last Call.

37

Agog 04.25.15 at 6:52 am

. . . & ‘The Cornish Trilogy’. Robertson Davies was surely an influence on Crowley’s work. I had assumed it was earlier, but ‘The Rebel Angels’ came out the same year as ‘Little, Big’.

38

David Duffy 04.28.15 at 9:00 am

Comments on this entry are closed.