The Starseed Oracle by Rebecca Campbell
The Starseed Oracle Deck consist of 53 cards, breathtakingly illustrated by Danielle Noel.
Includes guidebook.
Depicting energy portals, ancient sites, faraway planets and star systems of the cosmic universe.
Card Size: Approximately 9 x 12.5 cm (3.5 x 5")
A deck of oracle cards is a divination tool They are a little easier for beginners than Tarot cards. An Oracle card contains an image associated with a word or phrase. The cards can be laid out in any format.
The Starseed Oracle Deck consist of 53 cards, breathtakingly illustrated by Danielle Noel.
Includes guidebook.
Depicting energy portals, ancient sites, faraway planets and star systems of the cosmic universe.
Card Size: Approximately 9 x 12.5 cm (3.5 x 5")
A deck of oracle cards is a divination tool They are a little easier for beginners than Tarot cards. An Oracle card contains an image associated with a word or phrase. The cards can be laid out in any format.
The Starseed Oracle Deck consist of 53 cards, breathtakingly illustrated by Danielle Noel.
Includes guidebook.
Depicting energy portals, ancient sites, faraway planets and star systems of the cosmic universe.
Card Size: Approximately 9 x 12.5 cm (3.5 x 5")
A deck of oracle cards is a divination tool They are a little easier for beginners than Tarot cards. An Oracle card contains an image associated with a word or phrase. The cards can be laid out in any format.
Little History
The word oracle comes from the Latin verb ōrāre, "to speak"
From the early 14th century, when cards were first introduced in Europe. In the late 1700, Oracle decks were created in which symbols were added to each playing card such as a key, a house, ring and scythe. When you look into Origins of the Oracle Cards there is one popular name that stands out Le Normand. Marie Anne Adelaide Le Normand (1772-1843) born in Normandy France she was a famous fortune teller. In my research I can not find information that Le Norman actually crated any cards herself. After Marie Anne Adelaide Le Normands death her name Le Normand was used on several decks attached merely so that the publishers could cash in on the fame of Marie Anne Adelaide Le Normand. (Grand jeu de Mlle Le Normand, published 1845 in France by Grimaud) and (Petit Le Normand, published 1846 in Germany.)
Robert M Place (an American artist and author known for his work on tarot history, symbolism, and divination) believes that the Hooper’s deck is the earliest published in England on October 2, 1775. “The oldest oracle deck that I have found, the one that appears to be the predecessor of all Le Normand decks and other oracle decks, Including The Burning Serpent Oracle, is S. Hooper’s Conversational Card.”