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The award winning Chrysalis Tarot Companion Book is now available. Search for "Chrysalis Tarot Book" on desertcart. Chrysalis Tarot was voted the Tarosophy Tarot Association's 2014 Deck of the Year and was a winner of a prestigious COVR 2015 Visionary Award and an International Tarot Association CARTA Award. Chrysalis Tarot opens up your psyche and illuminates your path toward personal destiny. Exquisitely drawn Otherworld characters and mythological archetypes guide you on your spiritual quest. Both the Major and Minor Arcana feature beautifully illustrated scenes that inspire reflection and stimulate your psychic intuition and imagination. The four suits that make up the Minor Arcana are: Stones (Pentacles); Mirrors (Cups); Spirals (Wands); and Scrolls (Swords). In place of court cards you'll meet a delightful Troupe of medieval troubadours who inspire you to fulfill your dreams. Deck includes 78 cards and 60-page booklet with instructions for a 5-card Pentagram Spread. Review: Fantastic Vibrant Artwork - I can't say enough good things about this deck. I have been collecting decks since 1976 & am a professional reader. I'm also an artist so I am very well aware of how much work goes into creating a tarot deck (that is why I have yet to create one & have stuck to the smaller Lenormand decks). The artwork of Holly Sierra is so lovely. When I first received the deck I kept looking through the images. I caught myself drooling several times. My normal thing is to immediately shuffle & ask "how will you & I get along" & pull cards. I didn't do that with this deck. It took me a week to do an actual reading with it. I was too busy examining the artwork over & over again. The detail is amazing, colors are so vibrant that they jump off the card, & on a black reading cloth the images pop with incredibly vibrancy and detail. Being a traditionalist I am not crazy about the renaming of most of the major arcana cards, new names for the 4 suits & also all new names for the court cards that vary from suit to suit. Based on the deviation from RWS tradition regarding the titles of the cards I would NOT recommend this deck for beginners. If you're a collector or a seasoned reader, then by all means do yourselves a favor & treat yourself to this deck. I plan on purchasing a second copy so I can keep it in pristine condition for the time when this deck goes OOP. I may even by a third copy and I have only purchased multiple copies of ONE other deck in my collection of over 200. That says a lot for the Chrysalis Tarot. Review: A beautiful and emotional deck, especially for nature lovers - I pre-ordered this deck based solely on the few images I was able to find on the internet, and it quickly became one of my favorites. My intuition told me I would really connect with this deck, and I was right. The images are beautiful, incorporating nature elements, and are easy enough for beginners while still being very absorbing for more experienced readers. I love the color palette, which combines warm tones of amber and gold on edgings with beautiful jewel tones of blue, green, purple, and turquoise. The back of cards is a reversible image of butterflies and one of the most attractive I've seen in a long time. It's just a pleasure handling and viewing these cards from any angle. There is so much detail on every card, which might include any combination of humans, animals, insects, and flowers or other plants. Also there is Celtic design scrollwork incorporated on a number of the cards. The four suits are spirals (wands), mirrors (cups), scrolls (arrows), and stones (pentacles). The majors are renamed as Otherworld archetypes, with traditional name included on card, for instance: Phoenix as the Judgment card or Bella Rosa as the Devil. Another unique element of this deck is the court cards which are given another name readily identifying the nature of that character. Examples are: The Visionary/Knight of Scrolls and The Healer/Page of Mirrors. The deck comes in a lightweight cardboard cover (such as a standard deck of cards) with the Little White Book enclosed inside. The LWB is more than sufficient to describe the card images, neither being too brief or too wordy. You really almost don't need it, but I still like reading the creators' intended meanings as the concepts are very well thought out and expressed. Unless you prefer a plainer or more monochromatic color palette, I can't imagine anyone not connecting with this deck. Also, it has a very positive feel to it overall. Not cheerful in a false way--the five of stones (pentacles) still perfectly projects that card's despair, as do other cards which carry challenges. Guess what I'm trying to say is that this deck is not dark overall in tone. The cards are average size, and good quality card stock. For once, I wish the cards were larger, if only to make the images slightly bigger because there is so much detail to absorb. That is my one and only very tiny complaint. I'm hoping this deck will become popular enough that an alternate larger card version is published, which I would readily purchase.































| Best Sellers Rank | #1,078,134 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #915 in Fortune Telling #2,188 in Tarot |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 662 Reviews |
M**D
Fantastic Vibrant Artwork
I can't say enough good things about this deck. I have been collecting decks since 1976 & am a professional reader. I'm also an artist so I am very well aware of how much work goes into creating a tarot deck (that is why I have yet to create one & have stuck to the smaller Lenormand decks). The artwork of Holly Sierra is so lovely. When I first received the deck I kept looking through the images. I caught myself drooling several times. My normal thing is to immediately shuffle & ask "how will you & I get along" & pull cards. I didn't do that with this deck. It took me a week to do an actual reading with it. I was too busy examining the artwork over & over again. The detail is amazing, colors are so vibrant that they jump off the card, & on a black reading cloth the images pop with incredibly vibrancy and detail. Being a traditionalist I am not crazy about the renaming of most of the major arcana cards, new names for the 4 suits & also all new names for the court cards that vary from suit to suit. Based on the deviation from RWS tradition regarding the titles of the cards I would NOT recommend this deck for beginners. If you're a collector or a seasoned reader, then by all means do yourselves a favor & treat yourself to this deck. I plan on purchasing a second copy so I can keep it in pristine condition for the time when this deck goes OOP. I may even by a third copy and I have only purchased multiple copies of ONE other deck in my collection of over 200. That says a lot for the Chrysalis Tarot.
R**.
A beautiful and emotional deck, especially for nature lovers
I pre-ordered this deck based solely on the few images I was able to find on the internet, and it quickly became one of my favorites. My intuition told me I would really connect with this deck, and I was right. The images are beautiful, incorporating nature elements, and are easy enough for beginners while still being very absorbing for more experienced readers. I love the color palette, which combines warm tones of amber and gold on edgings with beautiful jewel tones of blue, green, purple, and turquoise. The back of cards is a reversible image of butterflies and one of the most attractive I've seen in a long time. It's just a pleasure handling and viewing these cards from any angle. There is so much detail on every card, which might include any combination of humans, animals, insects, and flowers or other plants. Also there is Celtic design scrollwork incorporated on a number of the cards. The four suits are spirals (wands), mirrors (cups), scrolls (arrows), and stones (pentacles). The majors are renamed as Otherworld archetypes, with traditional name included on card, for instance: Phoenix as the Judgment card or Bella Rosa as the Devil. Another unique element of this deck is the court cards which are given another name readily identifying the nature of that character. Examples are: The Visionary/Knight of Scrolls and The Healer/Page of Mirrors. The deck comes in a lightweight cardboard cover (such as a standard deck of cards) with the Little White Book enclosed inside. The LWB is more than sufficient to describe the card images, neither being too brief or too wordy. You really almost don't need it, but I still like reading the creators' intended meanings as the concepts are very well thought out and expressed. Unless you prefer a plainer or more monochromatic color palette, I can't imagine anyone not connecting with this deck. Also, it has a very positive feel to it overall. Not cheerful in a false way--the five of stones (pentacles) still perfectly projects that card's despair, as do other cards which carry challenges. Guess what I'm trying to say is that this deck is not dark overall in tone. The cards are average size, and good quality card stock. For once, I wish the cards were larger, if only to make the images slightly bigger because there is so much detail to absorb. That is my one and only very tiny complaint. I'm hoping this deck will become popular enough that an alternate larger card version is published, which I would readily purchase.
D**R
Uplifting, positive tarot deck with seriously good vibes
When Toney Brooks fired me from my job back in 1985, he did me the world's biggest favor and sent me on my way with words of wisdom. I never imagined that nearly 30 years later I would buy a pack of tarot cards that he had authored. But remembering his wise words to me and knowing of his years of study in spirituality, mysticism, etc., I decided to invest in the Chrysalis Tarot. I have been amazed and pleased with the readings from these cards. The cards emanate positivity and encouragement, and the interpretations are uplifting, even on some of the cards that can easily be viewed as negative or threatening. Not only that, Holly Sierra's artwork on the cards is stunningly beautiful. If you want a joyful tarot deck to have around the house or to give as a gift, this is the one to choose. The one drawback is the guidebook that comes with the tarot set. You really need the guidebook to get started as the deck is grounded in various myths and folklore from around the world. But instead of a nice, readable book, the deck comes with a tiny paper booklet stuffed into the box. It's a shame the publisher didn't see fit to produce a proper book of instructions to accompany this phenomenal deck. Perhaps a follow-up book that can be ordered separately for the deck is in order.
D**D
Welcome to a whole new world.
One of the problems with the Tarot in general is that its imagery has become rather stale. Each "tradition" has its own set of pre-cast imagery, and even though some are incredibly beautiful and innovative, still, one is left with the feeling that, "Oh no, another one." When I get a new deck, I am always hoping for something indeed new, but the demand of the marketplace all too often take priority over innovation, and we wind up with a parade of clones. Enter the Chrysalis. If you're looking for the same old thing, you won't find it here. Here is the fresh breeze of inspiration that many have been waiting for. When I first opened it, what came immediately to mind is the Voyager. I remember the impression that deck made on me, and in its time, it was a whole new ballgame. But the while the Voyager is heavily analytical, the best word I can use to describe the Chrysalis is "Mythic". The images are very fairy-tale like, but rather than calling to mind the standard set of familiar stories, these cards encourage you to generate your own fairy tale, to tell your own story, and become your own myth. While the structure of the deck is similar to the "traditional" tarot, the imagery is very much a new ballgame. They are bright, colorful, and in most cases more suggestive than explicit in meaning. In many cases the images seem familiar, and yet are a very different take on the underlying theme. Consider XV, "The Devil" in a traditional deck, but here, "Bella Rosa," a masked lady parading through a carnival. The mask provides a certain anonymity, an isolation between the world and the inner person; while this can be a good and even necessary thing, how evil it is that a person must fundamentally lie about their true being to live in the world! Each one of these cards will make you think about new ways of looking at old meanings. And that is a major breakthrough. A Tarot card has two meanings, an objective and a subjective. The objective meaning, or "denotation", is bound up in a set of keywords, relationships within an esoteric system, and body of knowledge that points to a pre-determined. a priori definition of what the card means. You sit in a room, the Great Teacher informs you as to the meaning, and forever after that is what the card means. On the other hand, there is the subjective meaning or "connotation", a personal reaction to the card that often draws on unconscious sources which embellish the images with a personal significance. The chief problem in learning to read the Tarot, at least in learning to read it as an oracle, is getting beyond the denotation, into the subjective connotation, which is where the actual divination takes place. In a deck such as this. where the imagery is quite different from the body of traditional -- one way or another -- "learning" that fills the Tarot community, one is forced to rely on the subjective. You will have to look into your own soul to understand what these cards mean, and what they will mean to you is different from what they will mean to anybody else. Subjectivity is individuating -- having to find things out for yourself breaks you off from the herd. And as this deck breaks itself off from the "traditions" -- even, thankfully, the ones I often rely on -- to read it you will need to discover something of yourself that has remained hidden behind the mask. Which brings us to the book. I generally don't like tarot books, but this one is different. Instead of repeating the usual prattle, this one is short, to the point, and serves its purpose of launching your journey, rather than hand-holding you through it. I come from a very different background than the author, and would take issue with much of what is here, but the point is that the issues are raised, and how you follow them through the cards is your own prerogative. The book, in this case, is a helpful tool rather than a hindrance. I could go on about this deck for ever, and that is probably the best thing I can say about it. Its mandala-like imagery beckons one to go on forever. For here is a tool for the exploration of the conscious and the unconscious; for as long as consciousness exists, that exploration will go on, and indeed consciousness can only continue to exist where that exploration is possible.
J**T
A great deck for the inner journey
I was intrigued by the development of this deck on a Facebook deck creators' group I belong to. I really liked both Holly's art and Toney's philosophy. Holly's artwork is mellow and quite enchanting, with soft colors and a balanced focus on the human (or other mythological) figure and its frame or surroundings. I just found the whole ambiance very cozy. The full companion book for this deck is not available quite yet as far as I can tell (although more info is on the website), but I am definitely looking forward to it, because I can see that Toney can go much deeper into his mythological choices for the cards than he was able to do in his Little White Book (LWB). That said, I still found the LWB quite useful; I particularly liked how he would relate each card to its use in a reading rather than giving just the symbolic story in abstract. The only thing about the deck that keeps me guessing a bit is identifying the suits. Toney has changed up the traditional suits in Tarot to scrolls = swords, spirals = wands, stones = disks, and mirrors = cups. For the last two I have no trouble "getting" the relationship, but the first two are so close together in shape that I often have to look twice or three times to make sure I'm seeing the correct suit. Not a show-stopper, and I see how Toney's style would lend itself to getting rid of the swords as a suit, but it will take a bit of time to get used to scrolls vs. spirals. Others have noted the variety of mythological characters in the Troupe (corresponding to the Court cards), which don't follow the normal progression of related ranks (page, knight, queen, king), although he gives the traditional counterpart in the card label. They seem disconnected to their suits, too, and one needs to refer to the LWB to find the message from each one. After seeing how the Troupe was used and noting the use of specific mythological figures in most of the other cards, I settled into this sense of having 78 companions on my inner journey, lending me their unique perspectives to support me in my day or in pondering the question I may ask. A personal deck, this is. Almost an independent oracle deck, but not quite. I feel like I've got input from all over the world as well, with many different cultural mythologies represented along the way (my fav is Papa Legba, who sits with the Strength card). I plan to use this deck primarily for inner journey and personal transformation types of questions. It's also useful as a daily draw, particularly in conjunction with another deck to see "who" is working with you and what message they may have to apply to the question.
J**Z
An essential deck
I bought this deck in December 2023, but I didn't use it for months. It didn't "resonate" with me at the time. About 3 months later, I decided to look again. Wow. Blew me away. I could read them like I'd never been able to read the Rider & Waite deck. I decided to use them exclusively as Oracle cards so I never looked at the book. I have no idea what the author intended. I can say, however, when used intuitively, it is amazing. I started with daily reads, then moved to past life readings. The imagery, the card names and the descriptors have all made it possible to intuit beyond anything I've done before. During readings, most of my clients ask me for the name of the deck because it's so powerful. So yes, I highly recommend these cards for oracle readings. I cannot say whether they work as Tarot since I haven't used them in that fashion or read the accompanying book.
T**B
Imaginative and endearing- beautiful deck of cards.
I LOVE these cards. The imagery is great and though I have not used them for very long, I find myself getting really accurate feedback from the images. All of the art is great and I find myself connecting with the images and kind of staring at them and going into a bit of a trance when I look at them. Each court card has a different type or character rather than just knight, page, queen, king. This adds depth to the readings and helps me see more clearly just what I need to see or understand from each card. I do, however, have to get used to these cards as they seem so in depth in image and meaning. I was a little confused by some of the imagery in relation to the usual meaning ascribed to the traditonal tarot. (phoenix for judgement didn't make sense to me). And the suits are all different from the standard as well. I was unsure which of the chosen suits went with the usual meanings. Instead of cups, wands, pentacles, and swords, there were "Spirals" "scrolls" "stones, and "mirrors". It will take some getting used to, but I think it sort of makes it its own thing which adds depth to the meanings. All in all, a beautiful deck of cards and one that truly speaks to my inner, feeling, and imaginative self.
T**S
Great deck; needs better packaging
I have been following the progress of this deck off and on for the past few months on Facebook. Every time a new picture appeared, it seemed to have something nice to say to me. I did not need another tarot deck, especially one that uses different terminology that the standard Ryder-Waite. I'm still learning and I thought it might be nice to master one format before starting another. However, each time a new picture would appear on my screen I was more and more drawn to this deck. It was ordered before release and forgotten about. Then it arrived. WOW! This is a beautiful deck. The cards are the size of cards and fit gently into the hand. They are easy to hold and to shuffle. The art is gorgeous and each card tells the story it should. The very first reading gave me a wealth of information the two decks I usually use do not. This is a great deck! However, it barely fits into its box. Three tries of putting it away and it was finally there. I need to find a pretty bag or larger box to store it in and hope that I can find it when needed! Indeed, I would buy a larger box designed for the deck separately! Because the cards are so lovely, five stars. However, the packaging rates only one. This beautiful deck deserves a better box!!
T**Y
Chrysalis Tarot Deck
Tuck box hard to open added ribbon to help with opening box, usual lwb, card stock average, backing picture beautiful and bright love that, front pictures blend in well with boarders, overall easy to shuffle fits in hand nicely
E**A
Bello, dulce, adorable, y preciso.
Adorable y muy positivo. Aporta al día un muy buen comienzo... Se lo recomiendo a todas las personas interesadas en profundizar su relación con su guía interior. Lecturas muy profundas y precisas. Muy intuitivo.
V**Z
Entrega rápida
El empaque se ve sencillo caja de una baraja normal, esperemos ver el contenido, llegó rápido algo que se agradece, este también tiene una leyenda de Made un china...asi que hasta no probar las cartas podremos ver las 5 estrellas es por la super rapidez de envío no tardó ni 2 días
S**Y
Zauberhaft
Dieses Tarotdeck habe ich sorgfältig ausgesucht und es hat meine Erwartungen erfüllt. Die Zeichnungen sind wunderschön. Die Zuordnung der Elemente und Bezeichnungen der Figuren haben mich angenehm überrascht, sie lassen mich noch einmal neu entdecken,wie viele Facetten möglich sind. Für experimentelle Charaktere wie mich, die auch schon Erfahrungen mit anderen Tarotkarten haben, lohnt sich das. Was mich freut, ist, dass auch die kleineren Zahlenkarten sehr oft Personen und Tiere auf den Bildern haben. Das ist so viel spannender als nur drei vier fünf Schwerter - die hier ohnehin in Schriftrollen umgewandelt sind, was im geistigen Luftelement durchaus Sinn macht. Ach ja - hier ist alles auf englisch, ich weiss nicht ob es das Deck auch mit deutschen Titeln gibt. Durchgehend sind in die Karten alle Motive mit keltischen Schmuckbändern eingearbeitet, auch wenn mystische Archetypen aus allen Kulturen vorkommen. Das war für mich der große Pluspunkt: Die Offenheit. Alle vier Elemente sind mit zarter Farbigkeit voneinander zu unterscheiden. Zu mir sprechen sie.
A**R
Très beau tarot !
J'aime les jeux de tarot qui ont leur univers propre et qui apportent une vision nouvelle des cartes, notamment des mineures. Celui-ci est de ce type. Si vous êtes des habitués du tarot Rider Waite, vous serez un peu déstabilisés mais pas perdus. J'aime beaucoup les cartes de Cour, elles apportent réellement quelque chose de nouveau. Le livret est en anglais, vous pouvez aussi utiliser le site des auteurs pour apprendre les cartes (en anglais aussi) : il est vraiment précieux, précis... J'adoooorre le dos des cartes, les illustrations lumineuses, joyeuses. C'est un jeu très positif !
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