Welcome To Witchsey Marketplace! - Pull up a broomstick and stay awhile ✨Happy 4th of July, Witches! Stay Safe & Bring on the Chaos!Next giveaway is August 1st for all qualifying purchases in July! Ivy Lynne's Apothecary is this Months Sponsored Vendor!Welcome To Witchsey Marketplace! - Pull up a broomstick and stay awhile ✨Happy 4th of July, Witches! Stay Safe & Bring on the Chaos!Next giveaway is August 1st for all qualifying purchases in July! Ivy Lynne's Apothecary is this Months Sponsored Vendor!Welcome To Witchsey Marketplace! - Pull up a broomstick and stay awhile ✨Happy 4th of July, Witches! Stay Safe & Bring on the Chaos!Next giveaway is August 1st for all qualifying purchases in July! Ivy Lynne's Apothecary is this Months Sponsored Vendor!Welcome To Witchsey Marketplace! - Pull up a broomstick and stay awhile ✨Happy 4th of July, Witches! Stay Safe & Bring on the Chaos!Next giveaway is August 1st for all qualifying purchases in July! Ivy Lynne's Apothecary is this Months Sponsored Vendor!
W.I.T.C.H. Tarot. Angi Sullins and Silas Toball build a 78-card feminine empowerment tarot around the acronym Woman In Total Control of Herself, with collage-style illustrations, gold gilt edging, a 208-page guidebook of poetry and card meanings, and an organza drawstring pouch.
Description:
Quick Specs
Type: Feminine empowerment tarot deck with guidebook and pouch
Cards: 78 gold gilt-edged tarot cards
Guidebook: 208-page full-color guidebook with poetry, musings, card meanings, and three custom card spreads
Pouch: Organza drawstring pouch included
Authors: Angi Sullins (text) and Silas Toball (art)
A Feminine Empowerment Tarot Built Around Sovereignty and Practical Magic
The W.I.T.C.H. Tarot takes its name from the acronym Woman In Total Control of Herself, and the 78-card deck is designed as a companion for the working practice of reclaiming agency, authenticity, and practical magic. Angi Sullins writes the text and Silas Toball creates the collage-style illustrations across the 78 cards and the 208-page full-color guidebook. The card imagery is layered and lush, with feminine figures at the center of most compositions and symbolic material drawn from multiple witchcraft traditions collaged together. The 208-page guidebook is unusually substantial for a tarot deck and includes poetry, musings, working card meanings, and three custom card spreads. The deck ships with an organza drawstring pouch, and the cards carry gold gilt edging.
The 78-card structure is intact, so any reader with a tarot background can pick this deck up without relearning the framework. What sets this deck apart from a traditional Rider Waite Smith is the empowerment framing that Sullins carries through the guidebook. Each card meaning is written to support a reader working toward sovereignty in their own practice and life rather than presenting the archetypes in a neutral or purely symbolic register. The three custom spreads in the guidebook are designed around the empowerment framing, and they give a reader who wants to work with the deck's specific voice a way to do that from the first reading rather than adapting a generic tarot spread to fit.
Where This Deck Fits in Your Practice
Reach for W.I.T.C.H. Tarot for readings anchored in sovereignty and agency: decisions about work, relationships, creative practice, and the practical magic of moving through a life you are shaping deliberately. The deck also works well as a gift for readers stepping into or renewing a personal witchcraft practice, and the substantial 208-page guidebook makes it a strong first tarot for a reader who wants both cards and a working companion. The gold gilt edging and organza pouch place it in the collector-quality range. Browse my Tarot Decks collection for decks that pair with or contrast to this one.
How to Read with the W.I.T.C.H. Tarot
The deck rewards a reader willing to engage with the empowerment framing rather than reading the cards as neutral symbols.
Read the Guidebook Introduction
Before your first reading, read Sullins's introduction to the deck and the empowerment framing that carries through the card meanings. The 208-page guidebook is written as a companion rather than a reference, and starting with the introduction grounds you in the voice of the deck before the cards themselves speak.
Try the Three Custom Spreads First
The guidebook includes three custom spreads Sullins designed for the deck's empowerment framing. Use them for your first several readings before adapting to your own layouts. Each spread is built around a specific working question about sovereignty, authenticity, or practical magic, and they teach you how the deck holds those questions.
Read Reversals as Part of the Sovereignty Work
When a card lands reversed, honor it as a companion voice to the upright meaning. Sullins's empowerment framing gives you a natural reversal vocabulary: what the sovereign self does when this energy is blocked, disowned, or turned against itself. Reversal meanings are part of the whole tarot story here as much as in a classic deck, and reading them keeps the sovereignty work honest.
The Tarot Fellow Standard
I brought W.I.T.C.H. Tarot into the shop because a well-produced feminine empowerment tarot with a substantial working guidebook is a specific and useful category, and this deck earns its place. Sullins and Toball built something that reads as both beautiful and practical, and the 208-page guidebook gives buyers a working companion rather than a token reference. Browse my All Tarot and Oracle Decks collection for the broader lineup this deck belongs to.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use this deck if I am not a woman?
The W.I.T.C.H. acronym centers on Woman In Total Control of Herself, and the guidebook voice is written for readers working with feminine sovereignty. That said, the 78-card tarot structure is intact and readers of any gender interested in reclaiming sovereignty, working with authenticity, or engaging with the empowerment framing can read the deck. The voice is unapologetically feminine; the tarot itself is open.
Is this deck good for shadow work?
Yes. Reviewers specifically note that the imagery has a visceral quality and the card meanings often come off dark at first before turning the darkness into something usable. That is exactly what shadow work asks of a reader: face the discomfort, let it teach you, and integrate what you find. Sullins's guidebook supports the shadow work explicitly, and the 208-page length gives the guidebook room to hold the deeper material.
Is this deck based on the Rider Waite Smith tarot?
The 78-card structure and the four suits are intact, and a Rider Waite Smith reader can read the deck with the familiar framework. The imagery is collage-style rather than Rider Waite Smith derivative, and Sullins's card meanings are written for feminine sovereignty and empowerment rather than as neutral archetypal readings, so the deck's voice is distinct even when the underlying structure is familiar.
W.I.T.C.H. Tarot by Angi Sullins & Silas Toball — Woman In Total Control of Herself, 78-Card Feminine Empowerment Deck