top of page
An assortment of tarot card decks. From top left to right the Angel Tarot, the Cats Rule The Earth Tarot, the Cthulu Dark Arts Tarot, The Modern Witch Tarot, The Rider-Waitte-Smith Tarot, The Rainbow moon Tarot, The Witches Garden Tarot, and the Occult Tarot

Meet The Cards

Every deck has a voice, a mood, a rhythm. Choose the one that speaks to you—or let the right one find you. Want a deeper peek into how each one works? See my guide to choosing the right reading.

🌈 The Rainbow Healer

A three-card tarot spread from the Rainbow Moon Tarot deck, featuring the Two of Cups, The World, and the Six of Crystals. The brightly colored cards showcase diverse, inclusive figures in vivid, magical settings. Surrounding the spread are the Rainbow Moon Tarot guidebook and deck box, known as the Rainbow Healer. The scene is adorned with a large clear quartz crystal, a rainbow fidget spinner, three lit candles, and a scattered collection of rainbow-hued gemstones, creating a vibrant and healing altar-like arrangement.

Soft strength, emotional truth, radiant renewal

 

Rainbow Healer moves like water and light—tender, clear, and fiercely gentle. It speaks to the parts of you that are still learning how to trust your own reflection. This deck doesn’t force clarity; it coaxes it, wrapping hard truths in softness and asking only for honesty in return. Best approached with openness and curiosity, The Rainbow Healer brings comfort without avoidance, and insight without sharpness. It’s here to remind you: healing doesn’t mean fixing—it means remembering what still shines.

🐾 The Velvet Familiar

Keeper of warmth, watcher in stillness, soft walker through shadow


The Velvet Familiar doesn’t chase clarity—it curls around it, waiting for you to be ready. A quiet companion in moments of ache or pause, this deck teaches through presence, not pressure. It honors tradition, protects mystery, and offers gentle nudges toward freedom when the time is right. Whether you are grieving, unraveling, or simply needing to be witnessed, The Velvet Familiar waits—tail wrapped around truth, paws on the threshold, offering comfort in the silence.

A three-card tarot spread from the Cats Rule the Earth Tarot deck, also known as the Velvet Familiar, featuring the Strength, The Hanged Man, and The Hermit cards. Each card portrays a cat as the central figure, illustrated with personality and symbolism unique to each archetype. Surrounding the spread are the matching guidebook, a blue and white porcelain teacup with its saucer, a polished amethyst pyramid, and a piece of conglomerate jasper marked with a natural yin-yang-like pattern. Nearby, a small collection of feathers and deep maroon-colored wool add texture and cozy, mystical energy to the scene.

🪐 The Cosmic Initiator

A four-card tarot spread using the H.P. Lovecraft-inspired Cthulhu Occult Tarot deck, illustrated in a dark, stylised aesthetic. The Magician, The Lovers, and The Star are revealed, with the fourth card left mysteriously fully unrevealed. The spread is arranged on an altar that includes the deck’s guidebook, titled The Cosmic Initiator, alongside a black drawstring bag adorned with a white pentacle, with the abstract-backed cards partially emerging. Also present are a small mirror, a jar of moon water, a bundle of white feathers wrapped in red ribbon, and a charred piece of parchment inscribed with arcane symbols—evoking a ritualistic and otherworldly atmosphere.

Threshold walker, fire shaper, revealer of resonance


The Cosmic Initiator does not arrive quietly. It seeks those on the edge of becoming—those who feel the call before they understand its shape. It carries vision into form, offering fragments of the future anchored in strange soil. This deck does not soften the truth, nor does it rush the path. It teaches through tension: the crackle between desire and discipline, chaos and craft. Come to it not for comfort, but for clarity. It is here to ignite your knowing, demand your strength, and call you—fully and unflinchingly—into your next becoming.

🧱 The Architect of Self

Builder of boundaries, sculptor of truth, mentor in becoming


The Architect of Self doesn’t shout — she sketches, slices, and sets the foundation. She’s the mentor who asks better questions, the friend who helps you put your name back on your own life. With sharp insight and fierce compassion, this deck clears the clutter of who you were told to be and invites you to rebuild. One brick of truth at a time. No more carrying what was never yours. No more waiting to be seen. She’s here to help you name yourself — and mean it.

A five-card tarot spread from the Modern Witch Tarot deck, also known as the Architect of Self. The cards—Three of Cups, The Fool, Queen of Wands, King of Pentacles, and Knight of Pentacles—feature powerful, femme-presenting figures in bold, contemporary illustrations. The spread is set on a vibrant altar space, surrounded by a mirror with the phrase 'You decide who you are' scrawled in bright red lipstick. Scattered around are an array of crystals including citrine, fluorite, amethyst, rutilated quartz, rose quartz, and Picasso stone. Additional elements include a small tealight candle, a stack of miniature spell books, a feather, a wooden box, a jar of moon water, a cheeky coin that reads 'Hell Yeah,' and a pair of sassy sunglasses—creating a scene that radiates confidence, empowerment, and modern magick.

🌌 The Mystic Philosopher

A two-card tarot spread from the Fountain Tarot, known as the Mystic Philosopher, displayed in a wooden card holder. The cards—The Star and The Wheel of Fortune—feature abstract, ethereal figures rendered in the deck's signature soft, luminous style. The scene includes the holographic Fountain Tarot box, a piece of selenite, and a striking mookaite stone split cleanly into brown and white halves. A leather-bound grimoire embossed with an owl peeks into view, alongside the green glow of a moon water bottle. Herbs, draped fabrics, and other subtle altar elements form a dreamy, introspective backdrop—inviting quiet contemplation and spiritual insight.

Sacred slowness, quiet unraveling, wisdom in the waiting


The Mythic Philosopher doesn’t hand you answers — it invites you into a dialogue with your own becoming. It speaks in layered truths, subtle reflections, and the echoes between questions. This deck values patience, surrender, and a long view of growth. It teaches that insight is not a spark but a slow burn — and that wisdom takes root in silence, not noise. Come to it when you’re ready to linger in the mystery, to let go of timelines, and to trust the beauty of the in-between.

🪞 The Stoic Therapist

Clear eyes, steady heart, honesty without harm


The Stoic Therapist doesn’t offer fantasy — it offers freedom. This deck speaks in firm truths and quiet clarity. It holds a mirror to your patterns, not to shame you, but to invite release. It sees the shadow, the spiral, the fear — and helps you name them without flinching. With patient wisdom and a steady hand, it teaches self-honesty, emotional responsibility, and the power of letting go. Come to it when your mind is loud and your heart is heavy. It won’t sugarcoat. But it will stay.

A two-card tarot spread using the original Rider-Waite-Smith deck, representing the Stoic Therapist. The Devil and The Fool cards are displayed within a wooden box, accompanied by an assortment of small gemstones and a gold lighter resting on top. Beneath the box lies a notepad and pen, hinting at reflection or journaling. To the side, a piece of aged parchment is adorned with an eclectic arrangement of bones, herbs, mushrooms, and preserved insects. Atop the parchment sits a silver chalice and two unlit white candles, creating a moody, contemplative altar scene rich with shadow work and symbolic depth.

🌟 The Mourning Star

A two-card spread from the Angel Tarot, known as the Mourning Star deck, featuring the Ace of Pentacles (Cahethel) and The Devil (Samael). The Ace of Pentacles card shows a radiant, multi-winged angel with a central eye, surrounded by divine seals and the phrases: 'Divine blessings,' 'Drives away evil spirits,' and 'Rules agricultural production.' In contrast, The Devil card presents a shadowy, enigmatic angelic figure marked with the words: 'The severity of God,' 'Seduction and downfall,' 'Communications with the dead,' and 'Teaches the occult and magic.' The cards rest within a sacred altar space adorned with gemstones—lepidolite, sodalite, citrine, obsidian, and opalite—alongside a vintage key, dried purple roses, and a purple affirmation card that reads: 'When I am spiritually aligned, I can trust the universe will unfold for me.' Completing the scene are the Angel Tarot guidebook and a softly glowing white tealight candle, creating a space of both celestial grace and shadowed dept

Devotion in desolation, light through fog, guardian of sacred resilience


The Mourning Star does not shine to be seen — it glows quietly in the background, steady and unwavering. Born of soft endurance and spiritual weight, this deck walks with you through the moments others turn away from. It speaks not in certainty, but in symbols, dreams, and emotional echoes. A teacher of sacred persistence, it invites you to keep going — not with force, but with grace. This is a deck for grief, for faith, for slow recovery. For remembering that even in the coldest hours, you are not alone — and even now, you are becoming.

🕯️ The Unseen Council

Infernal wisdom, sacred precision, unflinching truth

The Unseen Council speaks in contracts, clarity, and shadowed insight. It does not whisper—it waits. This deck offers communion with forces that demand presence: daemons, archetypes, and forgotten parts of the self. Each card is a seal; each message, a reckoning. Best approached with reverence and resolve, The Unseen Council serves those ready to look directly at what others avoid. Use it when the path forks, the mask cracks, or when your power needs remembering.

A dark, evocative three-card spread from the Occult Tarot, also known as The Unseen Council, featuring the Ace of Pentacles (Lucifuge Rofocale), King of Pentacles (Berith), and The Magician (Baphomet). Each card displays the demon's image, seal, Goetic number, Hebrew angel name, and a description of their powers: 'Gives all worldly power and treasures,' 'Turns any metal into gold, grants titles,' and 'Bestows health, prosperity, and divine connection.' Surrounding the cards are gemstones including serpentine, pyrite, smoky quartz, hematite, snowflake obsidian (pendulum), aventurine, and a small corked vial of black tourmaline. A scroll titled 'The Seals of Solomon’s 72 Demons' is wrapped in red string. In the background, an antique chair holds stacked grimoires, while a tall black candle bearing Hekate’s image flickers beside two white tealights and a corked skull-shaped bottle of moon water.
bottom of page