@Dazzleguts:dazzleguts wrote:@Chach
Is that an old European deck under glass beneath the other decks?
Sure looks European, what with the skinny-armed clubs and that Bube (Jack) and Dame (Queen)
Evidently German, or from a Germanic country.
@Dazzleguts:dazzleguts wrote:@Chach
Is that an old European deck under glass beneath the other decks?
So apparently, at least some of what appears to be age discoloration on the face of my copy of the deck is due to the cards originally having a "cream-colored" face."Past-l-eze is our exclusive brand name applied to playing cards. Instead of glaring white, you are faced with a soft, pleasing pastel color, green or cream. Easy and non-glaring on your eyes.
“And on Past-l-eze playing cards Kings, and Queens, and Jacks are no longer stodgy and conventional but pleasingly reflect suspicion, flirtation and worry. (Design patents applied for)
“The designs on the back vary. This pack pictures a scene from the immortal Dickens – The Old Curiosity Shop. This is our exclusive design. The quaint scene of the old colorful shop and its environment is pleasingly reminiscent of Dickens’ delightful story.”
A stylized "fcp" - evidently the logo for the publisher - is on the card's central pip.PAST-L-EZE
TRADE MARK
FAN-C-PACK CO, INC
NEW YORK, U.S.A. MADE IN U.S.A.
========== Title ]==========This pack pictures a scene from the immortal Dickens – The Old Curiosity Shop. This is our exclusive design. The quaint scene of the old colorful shop and its environment is pleasingly reminiscent of Dickens’ delightful story.”
Yep, that's the one. Gave it a chance to air out, not so bad now.RSLancastr wrote:Oh, the smelly deck?
Glad to hear it!chach wrote:Yep, that's the one. Gave it a chance to air out, not so bad now.
Man, that sucks, one of the best things IMO is the smell of a brand new deck of cards once you open the tuck box. Like new car smell or something.RSLancastr wrote:Glad to hear it!chach wrote:Yep, that's the one. Gave it a chance to air out, not so bad now.
I just can't identify with the problem, though.
I don't recall whether I have mentioned it on UC before (since it has little to do with playing cards), but I am a congenital anosmic (meaning I was born without a sense of smell), and so have never smelled anything - good or bad - in all of my life.
And, before anyone asks: Yes, I do taste food and drink, although their flavor is severely blunted to me. This means that I cannot enjoy those foods and drinks which require a sense of smell to truly experience (such as coffees and wines). All coffee just tastes bitter to me, and almost all wine, no matter how expensive, tastes like vinegar to me.
Back on topic, though:
Although I can understand, intellectually, that cards from the home of a heavy smoker might be unpleasant to others (especially to a non-smoker, I would think), I can't and don't have the gut-level reaction to your complaint that someone with a working sense of smell might.
What? Nobody asked me?
Sorry to natter on about it.
Back on topic again:
I remember a fellow collector at a convention once remarking that the coating used on a specific brand of deck had a chemical odor that she could not stand, and so she never bought any decks of that brand any more. So sad.
I got the Mafia deck from fab.com http://fab.com/sale/22645/product/14628 ... owse&pos=0" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;dazzleguts wrote:I have a deck called "Chicago Cribbage" which has gangster courts, but they are more graphic and painterly, less illustrational. I like the illustration on your deck but was not spending on cards when they came out. Money was too tight. In Chicago it's a regular playing card deck but with some extra cards for altering crib rules, and all the courts and aces are diff.
==========[ The Cards on Display ]=========THESE UNIQUE
IRISH PLAYING
CARDS HAVE
DESIGNS BASED
ON MOTIFS FROM
EARLY IRISH
MANUSCRIPTS &
METALWORK.
CREATED & DESIGNED
BY PHILIP MURPHY &
CATHERINE TREACY
REVERSE DESIGN BY
ROSALINE MURPHY
Produced exclusively
for Dechtire Design
Copyright pending
."CANASTA SPEELKAARTEN"
(CANASTA PLAYING CARDS)
"TWEE LEEUWKENS"
This is The Song That Never Ends,
It just goes on and on my friends
Some people started singing it not knowing what it was,
And now they will be singing it forever just because
This is The Song That Never Ends,
It just goes on and on my friends...
(repeat ad infinitum)
==========[ The Cards/Images on Display ]==========A lovely antique set of Dondorf's “Rokoko” No.158 playing cards, with beautiful court cards and floral backs. The designs have clear outlines which stand out against a tinted background. The two black Jacks carry halberds; the Jack of Clubs reads “B. Dondorf” and “Frankfort a/m”. The other two Jacks are a falconer and an archer. Although the court figures are not an accurate reflection of any historical period, this deck has been nicknamed “Rococo”. The cards are slightly small by contemporary standards, measuring 85x58mm. This pattern was published between 1889-1933, at first with no Joker, which was added in 1906 along with small indices in German or English.
I love that deck, and have a few copies.montecarlojoe wrote:Technically my first decks:
I picked up a pair of 'Lion Bible Cards' whilst on a school trip to Israel 22 years ago. The faces are pretty standard, but the courts depict prominent figures from the Old Testament, and their names in English and Hebrew.
The backs feature a Menorah, and the 12 signs of the zodiac
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