So, recently, quite by accident, I found a Facebook group about tarot crafting. But it wasn't what I expected, not just designing your own tarot decks. These crazy people were ALTERING their purchased tarot decks!!!
Whaaaaaaa?
They were trimming off borders and coloring the edges and some crazies were even relabeling the cards or even switching the cards around or turning tarot decks into oracle decks! It was madness!
So I scrolled like mad through posts in the group seeing the things people had done to their decks and I was a little terrified. Imagine putting my clumsy hands on one of my precious decks! I spend a great deal of time studying and asking people about what they did, and I got referred to a YouTube channel, Boho Tarot:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDoXE8hLiEZ-2pun5Iqyqhw
I just ate up those videos. And I loved the thought process that went in to altering decks, the idea of spending significant time with my deck, handling each card individually and really putting my own unique touch on the deck. It just seemed like such a wonderful way to bond with a deck and really make it mine.
So, trimming a deck sounded like crazy talk to me, why on earth would I cut a deck with my imprecise hand? But edging, now that might be something I can do. So I grabbed my Azathoth Tarot, a very much mostly black deck, and a black calligraphy marker with a wide tip.
This is what it looked like before:
Why such a dark deck had white edges anyways, I'll never understand.
And after:
Looooooook how smooth and perfectly blended it is with the black edges! A subtle difference, I'll admit, but I loved it.
Even if this is how my hands looked after:
This made me bold. I was at Michael's with Shannon and happened to stumble across a pack of Prismacolor markers on clearance for half off and I knew that was a popular brand with other tarot crafters. And what fun is a new hobby if I can't use it as an excuse to buy new crafting supplies?
By the way, this was back in March. I've been slacking on my blogging, get ready for some massive catch up posts.
So, ever since Cari bought my the Biddy Tarot planner for Christmas, I've had a pretty steady daily tarot card pull practice. And I've been selecting a different deck every month as a way to bond with my frankly absurd collection. Having as many decks as I do makes me happy, but it can be hard to form a bond with so many decks. This has worked really well. And in this particular month, I was working with my Yoshitaka Amano deck, and honestly, just wasn't super clicking, so I was definitely looking for a way to bond with it more. Coloring it is! I chose a red Prismacolor marker as my tool of choice.
Before:
Aaaaaand after:
Even better, Prismacolor markers didn't bleed all over my hands so I didn't get that all over! I did develop a habit of laying the cards out separately after coloring them though just to make sure fresh marker ink didn't bleed all over though. And you can't see it in the picture, but due to the way the cards were cut when they were manufactured, each card has a small paper nub right at the center top and center bottom that soaked up the marker ink and bled into the card a bit, but not dramatically. Also, as the cards have sat I have noticed that the borders have created a faint yellowing bleeding from the edges around the border of each card. But that's kind of the risk you take when you alter a tarot deck.
At the end of the day, I'm still happy with it and my way of looking at it is that the cards turn out the way they're meant to turn out. Little unexpected things like that make my cards special and unique to me.
So I'm feeling pretty confident at this point, and I think I'm ready to edge the deck that really made me want to start trying this, my beloved Shadowscapes deck. I read somewhere that later editions of this deck have been silver gilded on the edges and that thought just makes me want to cry, I can't even imagine how gorgeous this deck would be with silver edges. But I definitely want it looking as metallic as possible. After discussing with my tarot crafting group, my conclusion is paint pens. So I buy a silver one and go for it.
Here is the before:
Now, a paint pen was a bit trickier than a marker, due to the whole wet paint issue, so I got out my old foil tape covered board that I used for working with worbla during my Xena costume work and I would carefully paint the edge of a single card and then lay it down without touching the edges or dragging the card around and smearing the paint. It took much longer than with a marker. I would only do like 10-15 cards at a time and then let them dry for a day before stacking them up and doing more. So this whole process took like a week. If I'd used my bigger board instead of my smaller one to lay out the cards I could have done more at a time because I'd have had more space to lay them out, but oh well. When I was done, it looked like this:
No comments:
Post a Comment