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Tarot Fellow

Florana Tarot by James Ferry — 78-Card Rider Waite Smith Deck in Art-Nouveau Botanical Style

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Short description:

Florana Tarot. James Ferry rebuilds the 78 Rider Waite Smith archetypes in a modern art-nouveau register with prismatic colors, flowing floral compositions, and a 72-page guidebook of card meanings.

Description:

Quick Specs


  • Type: Rider Waite Smith tarot deck with guidebook
  • Cards: 78 cards
  • Guidebook: 72 pages, card meanings
  • Author and Artist: James Ferry
  • Publisher: U.S. Games Systems, Inc.
  • ISBN: 978-1-64671-301-1
  • Aesthetic: Modern art-nouveau with prismatic colors and naturalistic flora and fauna
  • Tradition: Rider Waite Smith


A Rider Waite Smith Tarot in a Modern Art-Nouveau Register


The Florana Tarot is a 78-card Rider Waite Smith deck rendered in a modern art-nouveau register, with bold line work, flowing floral compositions, and a prismatic color palette that borrows from both stained glass and vintage botanical illustration. James Ferry drew the deck out of what the introduction describes as a lifelong passion for nature and a fascination with bold graphic convention, and the finished cards make both influences visible. Figures wear crowns of roses and peonies, thrones grow into leafy archways, familiar Rider Waite Smith compositions get rebuilt with vines, grapes, rabbits, and rolling green landscapes. The 72-page guidebook covers card meanings in a working reading vocabulary that assumes the reader wants to actually read with the deck rather than just admire the art.


Because the deck stays inside Rider Waite Smith conventions, any reader already using a Rider Waite Smith base can pick this deck up without relearning the framework. The Fool still walks off a cliff, the Empress still sits with her wheat, the Tower still crumbles. What changes is the visual voice, and the naturalistic art-nouveau treatment gives every card a garden-adjacent atmosphere that pulls the archetypes toward growth cycles, seasonal work, and correspondences drawn from botany. For readers who love the Rider Waite Smith framework but want the imagery to breathe, this deck is written for you.


How Florana Tarot Fits in Your Practice


Reach for Florana when you want a Rider Waite Smith reading in a warmer visual register: seasonal spreads, garden practice, love and growth work, and any reading where the botanical layer adds meaning rather than distracts. The prismatic palette makes the deck easy to read in candlelight and on a covered altar. If you already own a classic Rider Waite Smith and want a second deck that talks in the same grammar but a different accent, this is that deck. Browse my Tarot Decks collection for decks that pair with or contrast to this one.


How to Read with Florana Tarot


The deck rewards a reader who already knows Rider Waite Smith and wants to see the archetypes in a botanical key.

  1. Recognize the Rider Waite Smith Bones

    When each card lands, name the classic Rider Waite Smith composition first. This is Three of Cups with the three dancers becoming three figures under a rose arbor. This is Seven of Pentacles with the resting farmer becoming a floral figure with a golden pentacle. Naming the classical bones grounds your reading in the familiar framework before you let the imagery add its garden layer.

  2. Read Reversals as Botanical Cycles

    When a card lands reversed, honor it as a companion voice to the upright meaning. The garden imagery gives you a natural metaphor for reversals: what happens when the season turns, when the plant goes dormant, when the seed is still underground. Reversal meanings are part of the whole tarot story here as much as in a classic Rider Waite Smith deck, and the botanical frame supports rather than replaces the standard shadow readings.

  3. Pair Card Imagery with Seasonal Practice

    The prismatic palette and floral compositions make the deck a natural fit for seasonal spreads: wheel-of-the-year layouts, monthly moon spreads, and readings tied to what is blooming or dormant in your area. Pull cards for each phase and read the botanical details alongside the archetypal meaning. A card featuring roses in an early-spring reading carries different weight than the same card in a late-autumn one.


The Tarot Fellow Standard


I brought the Florana Tarot into the shop because a Rider Waite Smith deck done in a coherent art-nouveau botanical register is a specific pleasure that not many decks deliver. James Ferry keeps the framework intact while giving the imagery its own voice, and the prismatic palette holds up across every card without dropping into repetition. Browse my Celtic, Druidry and Nature collection for adjacent nature-forward practice.


Frequently Asked Questions


Is Florana Tarot a good deck for a beginner?

Yes. The Rider Waite Smith structure is intact, the 72-page guidebook covers card meanings without a lot of extra scaffolding, and the botanical imagery gives beginners strong visual hooks for memorizing the archetypes. If this is your first deck, you will be able to read with it. If you already know Rider Waite Smith, you will pick it up in an afternoon.

Can I read reversals with this deck?

Yes, and the botanical imagery supports it. Read a reversed card as the seasonal counterpart to its upright: what the plant does when the light shifts, what the seed does underground, what the composting layer looks like beneath a bloom. Reversal meanings are part of the whole tarot story, and I recommend reading them here the same way you would with any Rider Waite Smith deck.

How does it differ from a classic Rider Waite Smith deck?

The framework and card meanings are the same. What differs is the visual voice: James Ferry's art-nouveau style, the prismatic color palette, and the botanical detail woven through every card. If you love the Rider Waite Smith archetypes but want the imagery to feel like a garden rather than a diagram, Florana gives you the second half without changing the first.

Florana Tarot box showing a figure with a peony crown seated in a rose and grape archway holding a pentacle, with rolling green landscape and rabbit at foreground, by James Ferry.