Well..this isnt his normal style

$12 for the base decks $30 gilded with a $115 set of all the gilded, $160 in a bamboo box

One of my favorite is the Bicycle Legendary Ninja playing cards (by Yasuyuki Honne).wingedpotato wrote: ↑Mon Sep 16, 2024 11:43 am I have yet to find a Japan-themed deck that feels like Japan to me.
Thank YOU for this excellent write-up.Jykwei wrote: ↑Tue Sep 17, 2024 12:44 am ... I want to raise awareness as I don’t think it is fair for some of you who do not have experience in Oriental art being sold a “Japanese-themed” deck when it was not sufficiently authentic. Perhaps a card collector with a Japanese background can comment. Thank you.
Well, I second thisHarvonsgard wrote: ↑Mon Sep 16, 2024 1:37 am *Slow claps* The four deck set is a slap in the face for all customers.
Not sure what is good about that. Not that I had huge faith into capitalism prior but this campaign and Edward L. Bernays is what leads it towards 0%...
This makes me think of the discussion in another thread about how collecting habits have changed for us over time. As a 'collector', I do have a feeling of having to complete the set. However, I have become more selective and have been better at resisting the urge (this stuff gets expensive). I dont as readily fall for the 7,8,9 editions of a series. I don't know where I will net out on this one, but I am only in for a couple of standard decks at the moment. I have been on the fence for the bamboo set which I think is neat, but the bar to spring for gilded is higher now for me than it was a couple of years ago and the deck count is high.laitostarr777 wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 4:41 amWell, I second thisHarvonsgard wrote: ↑Mon Sep 16, 2024 1:37 am *Slow claps* The four deck set is a slap in the face for all customers.
Either you have to pick one of the four and had to lived without them OR indulge in your OCD to get all four them. And then it made worse that he made each of them getting their gilded bonanza, and then there’s the box set with different sleeves.
Well, I thought I would give a response to this, based on your accusations that "I didn't do an adequate amount of research"Jykwei wrote: ↑Tue Sep 17, 2024 12:44 am I am Chinese and I understand sometimes the Japanese uses the same Chinese character but means something else, so I did my 10-minute google research and bring up my suspicions to your attention. The tuck box is surprisingly lazy as I am 99% certain Jackson didn’t write them (it took years to master - and whoever wrote it was not given the credit). If putting kanji on tuck box becomes the new art style for tuck boxes then congrats, there are thousands of characters so they will never run out. But the main problem I have is do they mean what they are supposed to mean? The one for club - I am pretty sure they mean the club as a weapon, not the clover leaf. The words used for diamond actually mean the shape of rhombus - do Japanese actually use those characters to describe the suits of playing cards?
The theme is also very questionable. Ronin - web search consistently say they were samurai’s without their lords and were practically in exile. To be a ronin was not an honorable thing - so what’s the talk about reverencing the code of honor in the campaign? Why not just call this the Samurai deck instead of the Ronin? Why would Ronins be in clans? How much research was done?
The back design does not look Japanese to me. Google it. Most Japanese patterns go with very few different colors - they may have several levels of one or two colors, but they don’t do multi-color like middle-eastern pattern.
I have no objection to the court cards, etc, they appear generic and they surely look Japanese.
I am willing to return here and issue apologies if I was wrong and the project went through adequate amount of research and was based on accurate Japanese culture. I want to raise awareness as I don’t think it is fair for some of you who do not have experience in Oriental art being sold a “Japanese-themed” deck when it was not sufficiently authentic. Perhaps a card collector with a Japanese background can comment. Thank you.
Greetings, first of all I'd like to ask Jackson to calm down. My post is meant to be a constructive criticism. While I cannot stop you from using the word "accuse", please re-read my post, as the statement "I didn't do an adequate amount of research" comes from you, not me. My words, instead, are "How much research was done?" and "... issue apologies if I was wrong and the project went through adequate amount of research". All you have to do here is to present your cases and explain your side of the story, and this discussion generates positive exposure that will potentially give you more business, because I know for a fact that I am the only person who feels something is off with the project, and I offer you a chance to clarify things.JacksonRobinson wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 4:06 pmWell, I thought I would give a response to this, based on your accusations that "I didn't do an adequate amount of research"Jykwei wrote: ↑Tue Sep 17, 2024 12:44 am I am Chinese and I understand sometimes the Japanese uses the same Chinese character but means something else, so I did my 10-minute google research and bring up my suspicions to your attention. The tuck box is surprisingly lazy as I am 99% certain Jackson didn’t write them (it took years to master - and whoever wrote it was not given the credit). If putting kanji on tuck box becomes the new art style for tuck boxes then congrats, there are thousands of characters so they will never run out. But the main problem I have is do they mean what they are supposed to mean? The one for club - I am pretty sure they mean the club as a weapon, not the clover leaf. The words used for diamond actually mean the shape of rhombus - do Japanese actually use those characters to describe the suits of playing cards?
The theme is also very questionable. Ronin - web search consistently say they were samurai’s without their lords and were practically in exile. To be a ronin was not an honorable thing - so what’s the talk about reverencing the code of honor in the campaign? Why not just call this the Samurai deck instead of the Ronin? Why would Ronins be in clans? How much research was done?
The back design does not look Japanese to me. Google it. Most Japanese patterns go with very few different colors - they may have several levels of one or two colors, but they don’t do multi-color like middle-eastern pattern.
I have no objection to the court cards, etc, they appear generic and they surely look Japanese.
I am willing to return here and issue apologies if I was wrong and the project went through adequate amount of research and was based on accurate Japanese culture. I want to raise awareness as I don’t think it is fair for some of you who do not have experience in Oriental art being sold a “Japanese-themed” deck when it was not sufficiently authentic. Perhaps a card collector with a Japanese background can comment. Thank you.
First of all, I started my research process by making the commitment NOT to just do a 10-minute Google search and also pull up ye old Google Translator, as it looks like you did for your research.
For the suite names and translation, I hired (actually paid for their services) three different Japanese translators to give me the best-suited words for what I was going for. As the suits I used are French in origin, they may not mirror exactly in culture, so that is why I hired three different translators. I figured that if I gave all of them the same rundown of what I wanted and I got multiple responses that were the same, the translation would be the best suited.
I also had multiple conversations with Jack Penny about the appropriate words.
For the calligraphy work, I also hired a traditional Japanese caligrapher to write it for me. I don't mean this disrespectfully, but I have no reason or requirement to credit them for their work. It's their profession, and it was work for hire. I've illustrated hundreds of toy packages, and Hasbro has never given me credit for the illustrations. That is your job as a contract artist.
You are sadly misguided by the great and powerful Google if you think that Japanese patterns are predominantly monochromatic. Japanese fabric is some of the most vibrant and colorful in the world. It has multiple levels and numerous colors. As for the patterns "not looking Japanese" enough, I can give multiple historical examples of the exact patterns I used on period-correct woodblock prints of actual samurai.
This project was also not done during a 24-hour live and was drawn over the course of multiple weeks.
I find it ironic that you accuse me of not researching enough, without any real basis or evidence to do so, simply by your own "10-minute Google search"
As always, I know some people aren't going to like some of my projects, and I'm totally fine with that but don't accuse someone of not doing their research when the breadth of your own research is a simple Google search. I appreciate your comments and hope that assuages your suspicions.
Saying "issue apologies if I was wrong and the project went through adequate amount of research"Jykwei wrote: ↑Wed Sep 18, 2024 5:42 pm
Greetings, first of all I'd like to ask Jackson to calm down. My post is meant to be a constructive criticism. While I cannot stop you from using the word "accuse", please re-read my post, as the statement "I didn't do an adequate amount of research" comes from you, not me. My words, instead, are "How much research was done?" and "... issue apologies if I was wrong and the project went through adequate amount of research". All you have to do here is to present your cases and explain your side of the story, and this discussion generates positive exposure that will potentially give you more business, because I know for a fact that I am the only person who feels something is off with the project, and I offer you a chance to clarify things.
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