🔮 Unlock the Secrets of the Universe with Pulp Tarot!
The Pulp Magazines Themed Tarot Card Deck features 78 intricately designed cards inspired by mid-century pulp illustrations, housed in a stylish book-like box. It includes a 47-page instruction booklet for in-depth card readings, making it a perfect blend of art and divination for both collectors and enthusiasts.
Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
Package Quantity | 1 |
Item Weight | 0.56 Pounds |
Material Fabric | Cards |
Style Name | Retro |
Theme | Love |
Number of Items | 1 |
Container Type | Box |
Special Features | Includes Instruction Booklet |
Number of Players | 1 |
T**R
Fantastic tarot: INSPIRED!
Really fun but also gorgeously retro and sophisticated: I love it. The LWB (little white book) asks relevant questions and is nicely done. This is a smasher (as Sidney Poitier said to Pam in TO SIR, WITH LOVE). Get it!
N**N
Awesome deck! A Unique and Stylish Take on RWS Tarot
As a Rider-Waite-Smith loyalist, I was initially skeptical, but the Pulp Fiction Tarot cards truly impressed me! The artwork is modern yet thoughtfully aligned with traditional card meanings, making it both fresh and familiar. The deck itself is well-made with decent card stock, and the sturdy book-style box is a fantastic touch. I highly recommend this deck—especially for fellow RWS enthusiasts looking to expand their collection!
I**N
Great artwork, nice cards
These are a really fun take on a Rider-Waite-Smith deck and I just love the artwork. Cards are legible and read well. Each suit is like a different pulp magazine and the oversized box is designed to look like a well worn book. Overall great design concept, practical and useable deck, easy to interpret, and I enjoyed flipping through all of the designs.
B**Y
One of my favorite tarot decks.
I love to use tarot decks for writing story prompts. This deck is my go to for noir, darker story prompts, and anti-hero type characters. It isn't that the tarot deck is necessary dark-dark, but there is a slight shift in perspective with the cards that you won't get from a traditional deck to get your brain going.Most tarot guide books that come with the deck aren't that good, but this one is written in a wonderful, thoughtful manner and the author's take on the cards is really interesting. The interpretation is specific to his version of the cards. So many guide books don't bother and have basic info from a generic deck that's close to meaningless. The guide book from this deck really helps you point out and interpret imagery from the deck, so while I don't use it for "telling the future" I can see it being a great tool for a traditional tarot reader or a beginning tarot reader that wants a deck with a slightly different vibe.
L**Y
Such a fun deck
I saw this deck initially on Tik Tok as someone was reviewing it. I was immediately captivated by the artwork, had to buy right away. Shuffles smoothly with sturdy card-stock. Thin but not too thin. Perfect if you ask me. Love everything about these cards.
K**N
Practical and Revealing in Many Ways
IF you're into both Tarot cards and vintage pulp paperback covers, this is a cool product. I'm not really a Tarot guy, but I have used a few of the cards to make fun greeting cards for friends. YMMV.
A**A
Amazing deck!
absolutely amazing deck. i am blown away. worth every penny.
R**Z
Great but flawed
As tarot decks tend to do, this one follows Rider-Waite-Smith closely; but it is not a mere clone by any means. As far as the art goes, for me it is a bit of a mixed bag with most of the cards representing this theme perfectly and others being disappointing or even terrible (I really hate The Moon and Knight of Wands cards for example). Some of the exceptional cards would be The Magician, Ten of Swords, Eight of Cups, Five of Cups, Four of Wands, Six of Wands--to name a few. I would assume most people would not be bothered at all by the ones I dislike or bored by my favorites, but there you have it. One thing I really appreciate about this artwork is that the artificially distressed look is unique to each card; that's the kind of detail I really respect, since most often you will simply get an identical patina copy-pasted onto every single card. Here, each card is uniquely "roughed up" adding to the vintage vibe. I think it is really well done.As for the product itself though: (1) These cards are made of the cheapest and most easily distorted paper you could find; they are thin and bend incredibly easily. (2) The exterior of the box I really like--it looks like a beat up vintage book; however, the interior is really cheap cardboard and the booklet is cheap stapled paper, but the writing has a distinctive tone and seems to be very welcoming to people unfamiliar with the cards--I like it. (3) Lastly, I personally did not like the borders on these cards, which brings me to a story about how I liberated all this (mostly) wonderful art from the prison of borders...I ended up cutting all of these cards out BUT BE WARNED! these cards are absolutely the opposite of friendly to being cut and only those as stubborn or foolish as myself should do it. First of all, the art is square and does not have rounded edges to follow. More importantly, as I found out after I started cutting, was that the artwork is not all scaled to the same size, which means that it is impossible to conveniently shuffle the cards if you cut them to the borders of the artwork. The Magician and Fool were a bit larger than most cards and the entire suit of Swords is smaller than all the rest. The only thing that cooperated with my scheme to eliminate the borders was that the backing is a repetitive simple pattern that looks the same regardless of how you cut. So you have to REALLY want borderless cards to do what I did, but if you see the picture I took, I think there's still some merit to doing it. It really makes the cards look more like vintage collectibles: posters, magazines, adverts, etc. Personally, I do not regret doing it at all (and I promise I'm not just saying that) because this art really does look better borderless and it makes the artificial aging look even better. Basically, I can't shuffle this deck anymore (not easily) but I still like it more than when I could. I don't think I'll even mind the inevitable wear and tear to the corners as it will seamlessly meld with the style ;) You could even display them after you cut them out, but I like flipping through them too much.Overall, obviously I am happy to have the deck, but I could easily see someone going down to three stars simply because of the cardstock quality and cheapy interior of the box and booklet.
Trustpilot
5 days ago
2 months ago