home · customer comments · pendulums · about AYP · search · checkout · contact  

  ................... Want answers? Ask your pendulum.
 PRODUCT DETAILS      

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Login Status  Login Status

Not logged in

» Login
Shopping cart  Shopping cart
0 Product(s) in cart
Total $0.00
» Checkout


We accept Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover and PayPal

Credit cards accepted here





New
Best Sellers

Lookup products
by stone type:

Agate
Amazonite
Amber
Amethyst
Aquamarine
Aventurine
Bloodstone
Bone
Carnelian
Chalcedony
Charoite
Chrysocolla
Citrine
Coral
Emerald
Fire Agate
Fluorite
Fuchsite
Garnet
Hematite
Howlite
Iolite
Jade
Jasper
Jet
Kyanite
Labradorite
Lapis Lazuli
Larimar
Lava
Lepidolite
Malachite
Moldavite
Mookaite
Moonstone
Mother of Pearl
Obsidian
Onyx
Opal
Opalite
Pearl
Peridot
Prehnite
Pyrite
Quartz
Rhodochrosite
Rhodonite
Rhyolite
Rose Quartz
Ruby
Sapphire
Seraphinite
Serpentine
Shell
Shiva Lingam
Smoky Quartz
Sodalite
Sunstone
Tanzanite
Tiger's Eye
Tree Agate
Tourmaline
Turquoise
Unakite
Vesuvianite

Look up Products
by Theme


 


 

Home » Tarot and Oracle Decks

 Checkout
Radiant Rider-Waite Tarot Deck
Radiant Rider-Waite Tarot Deck
Previous 1 of 3 Next
  • Description

This fully illustrated 78-card deck gives a new radiance and depth to the most cherished, popular tarot deck in the world by Rider-Waite. Includes booklet.

ISBN: 1-57281-413-6

Size: 2 3/4" x 4 3/4"

Artist: Pamela Colman Smith

Arthur Edward Waite, who commissioned and guided the creation of the Rider-Waite Tarot, was justly proud of the deck that he and artist Pamela Colman Smith created together and which was published by William Rider in 1910. He described the art in his book The Pictorial Key to the Tarot. "The Tarot cards ... have been drawn and coloured by Miss Pamela Colman Smith, and will, I think, be regarded as very striking and beautiful, in their design alike and execution."

Pamela Colman Smith was born in England February 16, 1878, but spent much of her childhood and youth in Jamaica and New York, as well as London. She trained at the Pratt Institute, New York, and supported herself as an artist during her entire life. Her inks and watercolors found outlet in theater set and costume design as well as in illustrations for books, pamphlets, and literary periodicals, and, of course, the tarot deck that came to be known as the Rider-Waite deck.

Smith's contemporaries described her as a colorful, even eccentric character, and they admired her creativity and originality. She had many friends and famous patrons, including the actress Ellen Terry, the poet William Butler Yeats, and the photographer Alfred Stieglitz. Her talent was unquestioned, and her artistic output was abundant. She also performed professionally telling folk stories of Jamaica. Yet despite her hard work and ingenuity, she had trouble supporting herself. She died September 18, 1951, in obscurity and heavily in debt. Were it not for the tarot deck that she and Waite created together, her work might be completely forgotten.

Waite's choice of Smith as an artist for a tarot deck was more than fortuitous. Throughout her life, Pamela Colman Smith had been fascinated by magic and the supernatural. The Celtic Revival that took place in the early twentieth century imbued her. She was a sensitive (“abnormally psychic,” as Waite said), and many of her works portrayed people of Celtic myth—whom she said she actually saw, as well as visions that came to her when listening to music. Smith joined the Order of the Golden Dawn around 1902, seven years before she and Waite embarked on the tarot deck.

Smith rejected all forms of pretension, which might be what led some people, including Waite himself, to view her as primitive or naïve. However, her letters and work, and published interviews, prove that she was an articulate woman with a sophisticated knowledge of artistic composition and techniques, and a deep understanding of occult and literary symbolism.

Waite pointed out that until the Rider-Waite deck was produced, few decks used illustrations on the numbered (pip) cards of the Minor Arcana and "such devices were sporadic inventions of particular artists and were either conventional designs of the typical or allegorical kind, distinct from what is understood by symbolism, or they were illustrations—shall we say?—of manners, customs and periods. They were, in a word, adornments, and as such they did nothing to raise the significance of the Lesser Arcana to the plane of the Trumps Major."

 
Email Friend

Ask A Question
Price: $18.00

 
« Previous | Next »

Related items you may also be interested in:

Universal Waite Tarot Deck

Price: $18.00
Limited Edition Tarot Essence Series - The Emperor Pendulum

:
:
:
List Price: $120.00
Price: $100.00


Limited Edition Tarot Essence Series - The Empress Pendulum

:
:
:
List Price: $120.00
Price: $100.00
Limited Edition Tarot Essence Series - The Hierophant Pendulum

:
:
:
Price: $120.00


Limited Edition Tarot Essence Series - High Priestess Pendulum

:
:
:
Price: $120.00
Limited Edition Tarot Essence Series - The Magician Pendulum

:
:
:
Price: $120.00

Gentle Crystal Cleansing kit with Written Intent


Beautiful divination by
Eva Browning &
Knowing the Soul

1-866-519-9598

info@askyourpendulum.com

Send some loving energy with an AYP Gift Certificate

Gift Certificates

Want answers?
Ask your Pendulum

Browse Pendulums

Below:
"Solar Eclipse" Sunstone, Moonstone, Copper, and Sterling Silver - Click to view

Solar Eclipse - Sunstone, Moonstone, Copper and Sterling Silver Pendulum

Below:
"Regeneration" Seraphinite and Sterling Silver - Click to view

 

home | customer comments | how-to use a pendulum | browse pendulums
browse all products
| about AYP | search | checkout | contact


www.AskYourPendulum.com - Copyright © 2009-2013 by Knowing the Soul