I love my Flornoy and I rounded the corners. It's perfect and comfortable to use. Like the creamy color too. Hey! So glad you're back. And you sound well. But I know things are still unsettling there. Best, Anne
+1 about creamy & rounded corners! How do you round them & prevent edges from fraying afterwards? I've used scissors & thin bread of PVA glue, less than ideal but better than sharp corners.
Every time I watch one of these videos of yours where you are talking about reproductions of Marseille decks, I wanna budy all of them! :D Hahaha. Love it!! Hope you are doing okay darling. Looking forward to see more videos from you.
I’ve just rewatched this again. It’s such a great source for seeing the differences between these Noblets, each of which, like a good looking family, I think, are uniquely gorgeous. Early in, I got the Peterson (with rounded corners). Then someone pointed out that a facsimile might be harder to read because of the lack of clarity. I agonised between the Flornoy and Artisan, in the end getting Artisan because it’s smaller. Then the Flornoy popped up at a decent price. When it arrived, I discovered that in spite of the thicker card stock and sharp corners, I couldn’t keep my hands off it. I’m hoping that when I’m more familiar with the basic Noblet features, I’ll make better use of the more original, Peterson.
Haha, they are all gorgeous in their own way, aren't they! It seems I cannot get over the Flornoy's thick and sharp cardstock, so this is the one I use the least of the three!
Marseille and Flornoy are OK, but I wish that I could get my aunt to explain her "Rose of Sandomir" deck, it's quite different from any of the other decks that I've seen and her results have been very accurate. Another good video, thanks.
I don't think that colour palette does it for me. The green looks like British racing green and gets completely lost against such a dark blue. They appear to have also taken out a lot of green from the majors, ie in the robes. Adding that to the stark white backgrounds, it's one I dout I'll be buying. Thanks for the review.
@@wolfofcoins I only have Flornoys which I absolutely love, and his hand coloured majors. I really need another version as I think it's my favourite deck.
@@wolfofcoins my 2nd favourite is probably the François Heri 1730, possibly because a lot of the majors are so similar to Noblet, the cute size, and the quirky hermit and devil. I decided to go ahead and order just the majors of this version given I love small decks and the Noblet in particular. It will possibly become a version that I won't mind keeping in my bag for majors only readings on the go.
I love my Flornoy and I rounded the corners. It's perfect and comfortable to use. Like the creamy color too.
Hey! So glad you're back. And you sound well. But I know things are still unsettling there.
Best, Anne
Thank you, Anne! :) Yes, the creamy background is really nice
+1 about creamy & rounded corners! How do you round them & prevent edges from fraying afterwards? I've used scissors & thin bread of PVA glue, less than ideal but better than sharp corners.
I recently purchased the Artisan version, I'm very pleased with it.
Every time I watch one of these videos of yours where you are talking about reproductions of Marseille decks, I wanna budy all of them! :D Hahaha. Love it!! Hope you are doing okay darling. Looking forward to see more videos from you.
Hahaha, my love for Marseille seeps through the monitor and makes you want those decks xD
Thank you, dear
@@wolfofcoins Hahaha, of course! As always darling! I´m thinking about purchasing the lovely Artisian deck. Looks amazing! :-)
A fabulous video, thank you 🙏🏼💯
Thank you! :)
I’ve just rewatched this again. It’s such a great source for seeing the differences between these Noblets, each of which, like a good looking family, I think, are uniquely gorgeous. Early in, I got the Peterson (with rounded corners). Then someone pointed out that a facsimile might be harder to read because of the lack of clarity. I agonised between the Flornoy and Artisan, in the end getting Artisan because it’s smaller. Then the Flornoy popped up at a decent price. When it arrived, I discovered that in spite of the thicker card stock and sharp corners, I couldn’t keep my hands off it. I’m hoping that when I’m more familiar with the basic Noblet features, I’ll make better use of the more original, Peterson.
Haha, they are all gorgeous in their own way, aren't they! It seems I cannot get over the Flornoy's thick and sharp cardstock, so this is the one I use the least of the three!
Thank you for the wonderful comparison video. :-)
It was my pleasure! ^_^
Marseille and Flornoy are OK, but I wish that I could get my aunt to explain her "Rose of Sandomir" deck, it's quite different from any of the other decks that I've seen and her results have been very accurate. Another good video, thanks.
Oh wow, I've never heard about such a deck! Sounds very interesting! :)
I don't think that colour palette does it for me. The green looks like British racing green and gets completely lost against such a dark blue. They appear to have also taken out a lot of green from the majors, ie in the robes. Adding that to the stark white backgrounds, it's one I dout I'll be buying. Thanks for the review.
Thank you for a comment! Which version do you like best color-wise? :)
@@wolfofcoins I only have Flornoys which I absolutely love, and his hand coloured majors. I really need another version as I think it's my favourite deck.
@@sharfalor4244 Yes, the Jean Noblet is a really magical deck! :)
@@wolfofcoins my 2nd favourite is probably the François Heri 1730, possibly because a lot of the majors are so similar to Noblet, the cute size, and the quirky hermit and devil. I decided to go ahead and order just the majors of this version given I love small decks and the Noblet in particular. It will possibly become a version that I won't mind keeping in my bag for majors only readings on the go.
The boxes!