georgina: Me with short red hair (Default)
2015-10-09 08:10 pm

Learn Tarot through my new YouTube video series

The first two videos in my Learn Tarot series on YouTube are online! If you've always wanted to learn how to read Tarot, the time is NOW.

Best Tarot Decks for Beginners
If you want to read Tarot cards, you'll need two things: A deck of Tarot cards and a blank journal. This video shows a side-by-side comparison of the two decks I recommend for new students.

Deciphering Your First Tarot Deck
Once you have a Tarot deck, you'll need to quickly determine which card is which. Here is a quick trip through the two major parts of the Tarot and a little homework exercise to help you recognize every card at a glance.

If you enjoy the videos, please like them on YouTube. And if you really like them, share them.

Rough transcripts of the videos will be posted to the Files section of our Facebook group "Oracle Club: Improv Intuitive Arts." If you're not already a member, send me a Facebook request and I'll add you right away!
georgina: Me with short red hair (Default)
2015-05-23 02:33 pm
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It's My Party And I'll Scry If I Want To

Operation "It's My Party And I'll Scry If I Want To" is in its planning stages. We have a venue. We have some workshops sketched out. (How to *really* understand Court Cards, How to use Lenormand with Tarot, Astrological Correspondences for the Major Arcana). Stay tuned!
georgina: Me with short red hair (Default)
2014-09-25 12:01 am

The Minchiate Tarot by Brian Williams

It breaks my heart that this deck did not get the love and attention it deserved when it was published by Destiny Books/Inner Traditions International in 1999. Minchiate decks are quite rare and the historical work that Williams did in the accompanying book to this deck was extraordinary. Some faulted the deck for being too bland, while others voiced disappointment over the scant divinatory meanings in the deck's accompanying book. For my own part, I found that the deck was physically unwieldy; 97 slickly laminated cards are a lot to shuffle when you have small hands. The deck incorporates most of what we would recognize as a standard Tarot deck, plus cards representing each of the twelve signs of the Zodiac, a card for each of the four classical elements, and cards representing the virtues of faith, hope, charity, and prudence.

I did a simple 5 card Past/Present/Future spread, asking the cards how I should use them. (Yes, you can ask a deck how it should be used.) The first two cards represent the past. The middle one represents the present, and the last two represent the future. From left to right the cards are Five of Cups, The Fool, Eight of Coins, Nine of Staves, Leo.



The Past
Five of Cups. The card of mourning aptly describes the past situation. Williams died in 2002 and three of his decks were not well received commercially by the Tarot community: The Po-Mo, this Minchiate deck, and the Ship of Fools. That said his traditional-looking Renaissance Tarot was quite popular, as was some of his non-Tarot works.
The Fool. Williams' last published deck, Ship of Fools was a particularly challenging deck for the Tarot community. Every card had a Fool on it and the artwork was done as simple line drawings to evoke woodcuts. I know only two other people who own that deck. (And one of them confessed that she bought it on sale.)

The Present
Eight of Coins. Skill and mastery of material. I've already mentioned that the companion book to the deck is amazing. I believe this card is saying that now is the time to reintroduce this deck to the world. The current Tarot market is much more accepting of unique and non-traditional artwork.

The Future
Nine of Staves. Culmination of ambition. The Minchiate Tarot is, I believe, Williams' most important Tarot work. He was at the height of his skills as both a historian and an artist for this project.
Leo. This card indicates to me that the deck should be brought before the public again and that this time it will find an appreciative audience.

So what do you think? Do any of you own this deck (or other decks by Brian Williams)? Is it time to start a petition to get the Minchiate Tarot back in print?
georgina: Me with short red hair (Default)
2014-09-09 06:21 pm
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Picking out a style, testing video links & embedded video links

So many choices. But I have finally settled on this one ("Sienna") because it has an appealing graphic and a light background for the text. And it appears to look great on pretty much every screen I've tested. The folks at Dreamwidth have clearly worked very hard to make all of their webpage styles scale appropriately. Even on my teeny iPhone, my page looks attractive and easy to read.

And now to test out some video links. I just discovered this cool Australian YouTube channel: Avalon's Spiritual Odyssey. She has a trio of videos for Tarot For Beginners (1 hr, 27 mins). It is well worth your time and attention.

Here are the videos separately:

How I use Tarot for Spiritual Development
This isn't how I teach Tarot, but there are enough folks out there that live for pathworking and other mystical Tarot stuff so I'm noting it here.



Beginner Tarot Resources
The Tarot world runs on Rider Waite Smith with Golden Dawn correspondences. Again, it's not how I teach Tarot because it doesn't work for me. But I include it here for the rest of you. TL;DR: Books by Rachel Pollack, Marcus Katz, and Barbara Moore; Aeclectic.net website.



12 Tarot Deck Suggestions for Beginners
There is some great advice here and she shows cards from her collection. If you watch only one of these videos, make it this one.



Whew! And we're one step closer to going live. Exciting!