I've been working on a number of design concepts for playing cards that I'd like to produce, and have finally gotten the nerve up to share the first with you this morning. I'm wide open to constructive criticisms and suggestions, so please don't hold back. I really want to develop something in which others can find excitement from artistic, collectibility, and useability standards, so I want it (and all others to come) to live up to some pretty high standards.
In terms of production, I don't want to skimp in any way, so I'm thinking/planning that the cards would be printed through one of the top card printers -- I'm leaning toward Cartamundi or EPCC. I have a few USPCC decks that I really like, as well, but have some lower-end decks from them that I really don't care for the feel at all. So if you have suggestions on the pros and cons of one printer over another, please share. Here are the specific printing/publishing aspects that I am considering:
- Metallic inks on fronts and backs of all cards -- subtle or specific without over-doing it
- High grade stock and finish to appease players, cardists, and magicians
- Tuck box with foil stamping -- again, simple, elegant, and attractive -- perhaps with some embossing
So, with all of that said, here's the concept and art-to-date:
Royal Guard by Happyakrz
This deck is a celebration of the dedicated knights of the royal court who put their lives at the mercy of the protection of their Royal Family. Each suit represents a different wing of the guard specialities: Spades = swords, Diamonds = spears/lances, Clubs = Maces, and Hearts = bows/arrows. The pips have all been custom designed, and their layout on the number cards denote the protective stances taken to protect their principal (marked on the central dais by their crown). The court cards will all depict the guard members from each division, with their suit denoted prominently on their armor. I want to keep the Aces relatively clean, but as the negative space within each design feels kind of massive to me at present, I may want to add something within them to create more complexity to the design (without drawing too much attention). As nine is my favorite number, I intentionally pushed the "Captain of the Guard" out of the circle on the nines, otherwise all other cards are symmetrical.
I am currently working on the tuck case design -- it would employ the same design elements as the card backs, with the castle fortifications shown at top and bottom continuing around the box -- most likely, there will be turrets on the sides of the box. On a trip to England in my younger days, we visited many castles (both well-kept and nearly destroyed) and I was amazed at the stone-work that went into the outer walls and barricades, allowing archers firing angles and swordsmen fencing room. I want to present that subtly here.
In terms of the face cards, I've been using Photoshop vector paths to create my characters, and I like the general feel in the two characters created so far. I'm a fan of simple line art and shapes, and want to create poses that scream the action or power that they represent -- I'm just now sure how others will respond to this style. I know that some will want/expect decks like this to be hand-drawn, and while I have the skill set to do this, I've been working in the digital arena for so long now that I'm much more comfortable in that space.
Aces

Spade Court (so far)

Full Spades (so far)

Ace of Spades - close up

King of Spades - close up

Backs - close up

Let me know what you think!







































