The Pictorial Key Tarot by Davide Corsi

The Pictorial Key Tarot is a modernisation of the Rider-Waite Tarot images, very similar in symbolism to the original but not quite a clone. Created in a computer-generated style, the 78 cards are detailed and reasonably lifelike, but have a slightly perfect, plastic look. Read more The Pictorial Key Tarot by Davide Corsi

Medieval Tarot by Guido Zibordi Marchesi

This deck is based on the medieval Art of Memory, an esoteric doctrine that taught the rules of the true nobility: those of the intellect and of the soul. In fact, these cards describe the path to attaining perfection that anyone can follow, step by step, climbing each rung of the invisible ladder that unites the material world to the spiritual dimension. Read more Medieval Tarot by Guido Zibordi Marchesi

The Salvador Dali Tarot deck

This deck was created by Dali in the mid 1970s when he was 70 years of age and he was the first well-known artist to produce a set of Tarot cards. Each image depicts a mysterious, irrational and dream-like scene with enigmatic emblems, such as butterflies, crutches and silhouettes. Some images have been inspired by famous places and by distinguished European artworks throughout history. Several are original works by Dali. Read more The Salvador Dali Tarot deck

Tarot of the Sephiroth by Dan Staroff

This groundbreaking deck redefines Tarot imagery, and emerges in the metaphysical landscape as a new paradigm in the technology of self-discovery and empowerment.
One of today’s most talked-about and popular avenues of personal and spiritual growth is the ancient, yet newly rediscovered Qabalah or Kaballah. In the past, the crucial connection between Tarot and the Qabalah has often been obscured or ignored. Tarot of the Sephiroth brings this connection to life by portraying the diagram known as the Tree of Life, possibly the most effective matrix for human consciousness ever devised. Read more Tarot of the Sephiroth by Dan Staroff

The Crystal Tarot deck by Elisabetta Trevisan

The Crystal Tarots has multi-coloured cards with an art nouveau and stained glass look. The This is the 78 card edition, which was first published as a 22-card art deck, the Tarocchi di Vetro. The minors in the 78-card edition are a re-working of card designs originally by Eudes Picards. Read more The Crystal Tarot deck by Elisabetta Trevisan

Art Nouveau Tarot or Primavera Tarot deck

The Primavera Tarot was also called Tarot Art Nouveau, but there is another deck by Matt Myers called the Art Nouveau Tarot. The Myers deck is less representative of art nouveau and shows mainly influence of stained glass design, while Castelli’s tarot looks like the works by Alphonse Mucha and Aubrey Beardsley. Read more Art Nouveau Tarot or Primavera Tarot deck

The Hieronymus Bosch Tarot deck by A. A. Atanassov

Hieronymus Bosch’s unusual vision of the 16th century provides the filter through which Atanassov worked to create the Bosch Tarot. The quaint, the puzzling, the mildly amusing, the simply absurd, and sometimes even the lovely go hand-in-hand with the rawest monstrosity and the most disturbingly grotesque images. Read more The Hieronymus Bosch Tarot deck by A. A. Atanassov

The Golden Botticelli Tarot deck

The Golden Botticelli Tarot was created by the talented Atanassov in the style of the Italian Renaissance artist, Botticelli, who is most famous for the Birth of Venus. The 78 cards are fully illustrated and have small gold elements in the patterns and backgrounds. Read more The Golden Botticelli Tarot deck