The Röhrig Tarot deck

The Rohrig Tarot is a sexy, glossy Tarot deck that has been thoroughly modernised – the Chariot shows a Formula One motor racing car – and overall the artwork is beautifully done and finely detailed. There are two versions of the deck: the US edition and an earlier German edition with uncovered nudity. Read more The Röhrig Tarot deck

The Whare Ra Tarot deck

Perhaps the inventors of the Tarot cards intended that they should be understood as a graphic summation ofthe principles of the Qabalah, or perhaps not. At least there is no written evidence to suggest this, and the great Jewish scholar of the Qabalah, Gershom Scholem, is probably correct in his assertion (however deprecatory) that the connection was made by late nineteenth century English and French occultists. One way or the other, the interlock of Tarot and Qabalah is so precise that the systems are mutually explanatory. And actually, the likelihood that the two systems developed independently gives far greater authority to the ideas of both because it points toward their mutual roots in universal Truth. Read more The Whare Ra Tarot deck

The Circle of Life Tarot deck

The Circle of Life Tarot is nothing less than seventy-eight windows into different worlds. The round cards and fantasy-style art create a sense of being slightly off balance, signaling the mind that something extraordinary is about to happen. These portals to inner revelation are not meant to provide fortune-teller-like readings but journeys into the vast and fascinating worlds that live within each of us. Read more The Circle of Life Tarot deck

The Gypsy Tarot deck

This deck is the work of Walter Wegmüller. The title of this Tarot is more than just a Tarot-related naming, but it is also based on the genetically-intellectual roots which Walter Wegmüller inherited.
Together with these cards and the book (1975) of Sergius Golovin (from 1930 to 2006) should be mentioned “The world of Tarot”. This artist contemporary of Wegmüller with gypsy blood component supplies the paper, card reading how-roots in India and the use of the Tarot cards in the manner of the traveling (nomad) gypsies. Read more The Gypsy Tarot deck

The Stairs of Gold Tarot deck

The major arcana in this complex Italian deck are packed with symbolism, with Hebrew, Sanskrit, and Celestial letters, Vulgar Latin, Zodiacal correspondences, and the Path of the Tree of Life on each card. The minor arcana of the Stairs of Gold Tarot are unfortunately very plain. Read more The Stairs of Gold Tarot deck

The Ananda Tarot by Ananda Kurt Pilz

When I first opened the plastic box of this deck and book set, I was strongly reminded of many of the decks published in the mid-eighties, very “cosmic” and alternative. So I was quite surprised this is actually a deck published in 2001.
The art is very intuitive and I find it is very typical for a Pisces artist – the dreamy and emotional style, the use of effects like starry nebulas, fading and dissolving motives, spheres and ethereal figures. Most cards show soft, matted colors and a color scheme with many hues of blue, but some are vibrant and therefore spring out at you in a layout (e.g. the Magician, the Emperor, Justice (which is 8) and the Devil). The backs are reversible. While Pilz has developed his own symbolism, most of the meanings fit well into the traditional categories and may even bring out some new aspects of a well-known card. Read more The Ananda Tarot by Ananda Kurt Pilz

The New Age Tarot by Walter Wegmüller

The New Age Tarot also known as Neuzeit Tarot by Walter Wegmüller is a very trippy and vivid Tarot deck. Wegmüller grew up within the Rom Gipsy culture of Switzerland, where he was shown his first Tarot deck. His card descriptions and interpretations, brief as they are, seem to be a mix of profound Tarot concepts and trivial folk divination. Read more The New Age Tarot by Walter Wegmüller