| Sandra |
I love the Harrow deck! It works quite well as an oracle card deck right up there with the Doreen Virtue Angels oracle card decks and many others.
However, I have noticed 2 nuances that seem to be errors: The Rakshasa card, the Rakshasa's hands are backwards. We should not be able to see its fingers holding the tea cup, or else the thumb should point down to its shoes.
Second: The description of The Forge card in the book. "The Forge evokes strength through great diversity."
So, a variety of things evokes strength? I though it should read adversity, as in hardships and misfortunes evokes strength.
If you are going to make adjustments to the card and booklet, may I have a free copy for pointing them out if the fix has not already been made? It would be like I have a repaint miniature for a Harrow deck!
Sincerely,
Sandra
| Sandra |
Thank you Diego, for responding.
I take back what I said about the Forge card, I re-read it and it is fine. But the hands are still backwards on the Rakshasa card! As an artist myself, hands are difficult to draw.
Maybe the rakshasa isn't as good a shapeshifter as it thinks it is, and got its own hands wrong. This causes people under its rule to cast off its chains easier in a misaligned spot.
Rakshasa: "Do as I say."
Slave: "No, your hands are backward, I quit."
-Sandra
| Cintra Bristol |
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Don't have the cards in front of me, but if the hands are backwards from how usual people's hands are formed, then they're correct for the rakshasa. Sure, the rakshasa can disguise this trait with its shapeshifting, but if the card is meant to show a rakshasa, then it should show one with the proper backwards hands.
From the PFSRD: "rakshasas can be recognized by their animal heads (those of great cats, snakes, crocodiles, apes, and birds of prey being the most common) and backward-facing hands"