Difference between revisions of "Rider-Waite Tarot"

1 byte removed ,  21:42, 24 December 2021
Line 10: Line 10:
The cards were first published during December 1909, by the publisher William Rider & Son of London. The first printing was extremely limited and featured card backs with a roses and lilies pattern. A much larger printing was done during March of 1910, featuring better quality card stock and a "cracked mud" card back design. This edition, often referred to as the "A" deck, was published from 1910 to 1920. Rider continued publishing the deck in various editions until 1939, then again from 1971 to 1977.
The cards were first published during December 1909, by the publisher William Rider & Son of London. The first printing was extremely limited and featured card backs with a roses and lilies pattern. A much larger printing was done during March of 1910, featuring better quality card stock and a "cracked mud" card back design. This edition, often referred to as the "A" deck, was published from 1910 to 1920. Rider continued publishing the deck in various editions until 1939, then again from 1971 to 1977.


All of the Rider editions up to 1939 were available with a small guide written by [[A. E. Waite]] providing an overview of the traditions and history of the cards, texts about interpretations, and extensive descriptions of their symbols. The first version of this guide was published during 1909 and was titled ''[[The Key to the Tarot]]''. A year later, a revised version, ''The Pictorial Key to the Tarot'', was issued that featured black-and-white plates of all seventy-eight of Smith's illustrations.
All of the Rider editions up to 1939 were available with a small guide written by [[A.E. Waite]] providing an overview of the traditions and history of the cards, texts about interpretations, and extensive descriptions of their symbols. The first version of this guide was published during 1909 and was titled ''[[The Key to the Tarot]]''. A year later, a revised version, ''The Pictorial Key to the Tarot'', was issued that featured black-and-white plates of all seventy-eight of Smith's illustrations.


==Copyright status==
==Copyright status==