May 10, 2013

mobydickmarathonnyc:

classicpenguin:

There’s reading & loving Moby-Dick, and then there’s CREATING A CARD GAME OUT OF LOVE for the words and richness of exploration and adventure and awe and wow, this is just incredible. 

Moby Dick, or, The Card Game is on Kickstarter right now. In their own words: 

In Moby Dick, or, The Card Game players live out the voyage of the legendary Pequod, the whaling ship from Melville’s novel. The name of the game is whaling, but who can say what other mysteries the sea holds? Hunt whales to earn oil and work to assemble a personal crew of sailors; they will be needed as the journey unfolds. Cooperate with your shipmates; the dangers of the sea are less daunting to the sailor with true bosom friends. Oil is the currency of the game and it will prove dear, but what is material worth in the face of the white phantom? When the time comes for the final chase, only one player will earn the right to say “Call me Ishmael”.

Great stuff. And looks beautiful, thanks to art from Havarah Zawoluk.

Gimme.

3:20pm
  
Filed under: moby-dick cards 
October 3, 2012
westernohms:

charlotte’s miscellaneous-cards-as-tarot-cards website blows my mind every time i use it… believe it or not (what do i care?) but this is my life at this exact moment in time. http://quesepassetil.net/

westernohms:

charlotte’s miscellaneous-cards-as-tarot-cards website blows my mind every time i use it… believe it or not (what do i care?) but this is my life at this exact moment in time. http://quesepassetil.net/

(Source: mothersnewsofficial)

4:09pm
  
Filed under: cards 
August 15, 2012
Find the Fault via Agence Eureka

Find the Fault via Agence Eureka

4:04pm
  
Filed under: cards games 
June 6, 2012
via Agence Eureka

via Agence Eureka

1:31pm
Filed under: cards 
March 21, 2012
The Pattern Still Remains: Playing Cards

ingridrichter:

  • fifty-two cards in the pack symbolize the weeks of the year
  • thirteen cards in each suit are the thirteen lunar months of the year
  • four suits represent the four worlds, elements, directions of space, winds, seasons, castes, corners of the temple, etc.
  • two red suits indicate the warm seasons…

1:40pm
  
Filed under: cards 
January 19, 2012
oldbookillustrations:

Aces from a pack of Cavalier playing cards (circa 1660)

From Explanatory notes of a pack of Cavalier playing cards, temp. Charles II. forming a complete political satire of the commonwealth, by Edmund Goldsmid, Edinburgh, 1886.

(Source: archive.org)

oldbookillustrations:

Aces from a pack of Cavalier playing cards (circa 1660)

From Explanatory notes of a pack of Cavalier playing cards, temp. Charles II. forming a complete political satire of the commonwealth, by Edmund Goldsmid, Edinburgh, 1886.

(Source: archive.org)

1:41pm
  
Filed under: cards 
January 14, 2012
Power of Cards

ingridrichter:

By the queens are intended Argine, Esther, Judith and Pallas, (names retained in the French cards), typical of birth, piety, fortitude and wisdom, the qualifications residing in each person.  “Argine” is an anagram for “Regina”, queen by descent.

Curiousities for the Ingenius by Joseph Taylor, 1821.

2:30pm
  
Filed under: gyneocracy cards 
December 21, 2011
via Bibliodyssey

Knave of Hares
This engraved set of round playing cards was made by Monogrammist (Master) PW of Cologne in about 1500.
“The set is divided into five different groups (roses, columbines, carnations, parrots, hares) and each suite has ten numbers and four figures (king, queen, valet, knave).”
In addition to the base set of seventy cards, there were two further cards whose function is unknown. Just over half of the deck owned by the British Museum has survived and all their remaining cards have been posted online at the Prints Database (if that link doesn’t work, search with ‘Monogrammist PW’ in the free text field on the advanced search page). {a few of the above images had some stains removed}Trifoni have a horrible framed site but a wealth of early card history, including a complete copy of the Master PW series reproduced from a 1970s facsimile printing.

via Bibliodyssey

Knave of Hares

This engraved set of round playing cards was made by Monogrammist (Master) PW of Cologne in about 1500.

“The set is divided into five different groups (roses, columbines, carnations, parrots, hares) and each suite has ten numbers and four figures (king, queen, valet, knave).”
In addition to the base set of seventy cards, there were two further cards whose function is unknown. Just over half of the deck owned by the British Museum has survived and all their remaining cards have been posted online at the Prints Database (if that link doesn’t work, search with ‘Monogrammist PW’ in the free text field on the advanced search page). {a few of the above images had some stains removed}

Trifoni have a horrible framed site but a wealth of early card history, including a complete copy of the Master PW series reproduced from a 1970s facsimile printing.

4:20pm
  
Filed under: cards fauna 
November 5, 2011

thedorkages:

Playing cards.

Yes, once again it’s time for one of those very satisfying stories that begins with “we don’t know exactly when.” We don’t know exactly when playing cards were invented. We know where, though. As always when it comes to “paper” and “inventions” in the same sentence, the answer is China.

The first definite, absolute, totally authenticated reference to cards that is for sure about cards is from the (Mongol) Yuan Dynasty. So late, I know, 1295! Except that the reference to cards is a pissy as hell judgment from “the Department of Punishments of the Secretariat” accusing two JERKS of printing cards. “Cards!” the Department of Punishment practically wails. “Cards! For fuck’s sake! They had woodblocks, they had paper, and then they tried to destroy them as though we were going to miss the fact that they were running a gambling den what with the thirty-six taels of paper cash they had stashed around the damn place! And then some asshole functionary pointed out that technically all the gambling cases we’d tried were for dice and ‘[metal] money or goods’ and that we didn’t have precedent! Well, how do you like your precedent now, Mr. Nitpick? Served with a side of legal justice. Department of Punishments of the Secretariat out.”

From which we can decipher that a) cards existed prior to 1295 but b) not so much prior that the new Mongol overlords really knew what to do with them.

There are a bunch of unauthenticated references to playing cards predating 1295 in China, as you’d expect, which range from the “yeah that’s probably someone playing cards” to “wait, what the hell is ‘fishing for the giant sea turtle’”? The most frequently discussed is a game from the Tang Dynasty called ‘the game of leaves’ which may or may not have been partially a card game and which was almost definitely partially a dice game, and which, as far as scholar Andrew Lo could find out (I am extensively relying on him throughout the China section here), has rules that are some combination of

  1. craps,
  2. mancala, and just possibly
  3. Chutes and Ladders.

I swear to god I am not making this up.

Anyway, ‘fishing for the giant sea turtle’ is a variation of a popular drinking game from the Tang/Song Dynasties along the lines of the classic game King’s Cup. Depending on the card you draw, you drink according to different rules. The difficulty is that it’s unclear whether or not the Tang/Song Dynasty games had cards or jade plaques or wooden fish again I am not making this up, and in any case the cards were a lot more game-specific and don’t count as standardized playing cards even if they were paper. In the case of the giant sea turtle, the cards probably were wooden fish, because it was all themed on the turtle statue that sat at the top of the emperor’s court; when you aced your examinations you were said to be sitting on the head of the giant sea turtle. A sample card contained the following: “How did the giant from Elder Dragon Kingdom fish for the turtles then?/He used a rainbow for a long rod, and the crescent moon for a hook. [Instruction:] Please use fine wine to urge those who have passed the examinations to drink a full ten units.” It was called fishing for the giant sea turtle because you literally had to fish for the plaques from seven chi away, while getting steadily drunker. I think it should be clear to everyone at this point that in terms of having a good time, the Tang and Song Dynasties had this shit on lock.

And those fun images above on the left? Well, Mamluk Egypt and possibly India both thought this “playing with cards” thing sounded boss. Mamluk Egypt, with the characteristic restraint and simplicity with which it did everything, thought the Chinese didn’t really understand the whole concept of this block printing thing, because seriously what’s the point of having playing cards if you can see the designs on them? From Egypt, the cards made their way into Italy and Switzerland, where they proceeded to make Europe addicted to gambling.

Those Dark Ages. So full of boring farmers farming boringly.

Hello, friends! Thank you for sticking with me for the long, long radio silence, for which I sincerely apologize. Hopefully in the coming months I’m going to have a little more time to update. I love you all, particularly the very brave and very enthusiastic people who followed me during the four months of nothing. You’re my kind of gals.

3:21pm
  
Filed under: cards 
October 17, 2011
50watts:

from the “Crowley Thoth Tarot Deck” in Encyclopedia Of Witchcraft & Demonology, via Sound Mirrors, who tells the story of cajoling his older sister into buying it for him at a Woolworths when he was a kid, 32 years ago
Deck seems to be this (Amazon link)

50watts:

from the “Crowley Thoth Tarot Deck” in Encyclopedia Of Witchcraft & Demonology, via Sound Mirrors, who tells the story of cajoling his older sister into buying it for him at a Woolworths when he was a kid, 32 years ago

Deck seems to be this (Amazon link)

12:50pm
  
Filed under: aleister crowley tarot cards 
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