UC Featured Collector for Mar/April 2014 - Robert Lancaster

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UC Featured Collector for Mar/April 2014 - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by Mike Ratledge »

Everyone please welcome our inaugural Featured Collector and long-time contributor Robert S Lancaster.

He has taken the time to share a bit of his collection for everyone, and shown us how to get this area started!

My first attempt to do an "interview" was done by PM here, I posed questions from suggestions I got, and here's the results:

Questions and Answers
  • Q: When did you start collecting playing cards?
    RSLancastr wrote: Well, that's kind of hard to pin down:

    1968: I bought the first deck in what later became my collection (I was only ten years old).

    1978: I bought the second deck, and started cruising antique stores for more.

    1996: I got on the Internet and found the site "Auction web" (later renamed eBay) and my collecting really took off.

    Back then, a search of eBay for the phrase "playing cards" would show maybe 200-400 listings, and I would look at them all each day.

    Now, that same search shows tens of thousands of listings!
  • Q: How many decks are in your collection?
    RSLancastr wrote: I haven't actually counted them in years, but more than 2,000 - probably more than 2,500.
  • Q: What types of decks do you collect?
    RSLancastr wrote: My primary focus is decks with custom courts, but also Transformation decks, Christmas-themed decks, Science Fiction-themed decks and branded Bicycle decks.
  • Q: What is the oldest deck in your collection?
    RSLancastr wrote: I have a couple of decks from the 1880s.
  • Q: What is your favorite deck in your collection and why?
    RSLancastr wrote: "Palestine Play-cards", a highly-unusual and hard-to-find deck circa 1920 designed by Israeli artist Ze'ev Raban (better known to playing card collectors for his "Jacob's Bible Cards").

    Apparently Raban's attempt at creating a standard design for playing cards for the then-emerging nation of Israel (then known as Palestine), the deck has courts based on people from the Torah (the Old Testament), and suit-signs meaningful within Judaic culture (a Star of David, a menorah, a fig leaf, and something described in some playing card reference books as a "Red Spade".

    That "red spade" intrigued me. It was shaped like a spade from a French-suited deck, with what looked like a crown on top of it, all in a deep, bright red. What did it have to do with Israel? - the other three suits were very much rooted in Judaic culture, so I figured this one must be as well, if I could figure out what it was! My friend and fellow playing card collector Robert Kissel - a highly-educated Orthodox Jew - encouraged me to solve the mystery, as it intrigued him as well.

    Then, one day during that time, I was walking through the kitchen of my house, and noticed that my then-wife had been working on creating a cornucopia ("a "horn of plenty") centerpiece for our kitchen table. it was full of Fall fruits and vegetables, atop Autumn-colored leaves.

    I eyed it as I rounded the table, and suddenly I stopped in my tracks! Among the fruits and veggies was a big, red Pomegranate. And, with its leaves forming a "crown", it was shaped EXACTLY like the "Red Spade" pips in my "Palestine Play-cards" deck!

    I had no idea if/how pomegranates related to Israel/Judaism, so I called Robert Kissel and told him of my "discovery", and asked him if pomegranates were somehow meaningful within Israeli/Judaic culture.

    Were they ever!! He excitedly told me of how they are mentioned in the Torah as part of God's specific design for The Temple, and as a decoration on the hem of the robes of the Temple Priests. He gave me the number of the curator of a museum of Judaica. When I spoke with the curator, he confirmed that pomegranates were a frequently-occuring symbol within Judaic art. He was familiar with Ze'ev Raban's work (although not his "Palestine Play-cards" deck), and felt confident from my description that the "red spades" were indeed Pomegranates!

    The deck's highly-unusual and customized design, and my bit of sleuthing & discovery regarding it, make THIS my absolute favorite deck out of the thousands in my collection.
  • Q: What deck that you do not have would you most like to have?
    RSLancastr wrote: There are so many!

    But two which stand out in my mind are "New Era" and "Shuffling Joe", two early American decks. I recently saw "New Era" listed on eBay with a minimum bid of $450.00 - WAAY too rich for my blood!
>Mike<
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

My thanks to Mike R. for selecting me to feature here.

For those blissfully unaware of who I am:

My name is Robert Starrett Lancaster.

I have been actively collecting beautiful and unusual decks of playing cards since 1978 or so (although I purchased the first deck in what later became my collection/obsession in 1968, when I was only ten years old).

The primary focus of my collection (of more than 2,500 decks) is decks with custom courts.

Here are some examples from my collection:
==========[ ALIEN POKER ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/AlienPoker_zpsa41e6abf.jpg


==========[ AMERICA ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/America_zpsf3304cb9.jpg

==========[ ARRCO ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Arrco_zps67e9b2f1.jpg

==========[ ART QUILT PLAYING CARDS ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/ArtQuilt_zps17f42387.jpg

==========[ BIG DOGS ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/BigDogs_zps80dbde11.jpg

==========[ CARD TRICKS ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/CardTricks_zps2697f7a8.jpg

==========[ CILBRAS ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Cilbras_zps07d40af8.jpg

==========[ COCKTAILS ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Cocktails_zps19949433.jpg

==========[ CORSAIRES & FLIBUSTIERS ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Corsaires_zps8b9363fe.jpg

==========[ EVIL FORCES IN SLAVONIC MYTHOLOGY ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/EvilForces_zps3713c656.jpg

==========[ ITALIAN CATS ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/ItalianCats_zps1e4e37cf.jpg

==========[ JACOB'S BIBLE PLAYING CARDS ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/JacobsBible_zps80b96176.jpg

==========[ KENNEDY KARDS ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/KennedyKards_zps8b1d39ad.jpg

==========[ LA TRAVIATA ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/LaTraviata_zps56e3a84a.jpg

==========[ LE FLORENTIN ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/LeFlorentin_zps74edfd95.jpg

==========[ LOUIS XV ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/LouisXV_zps292e70af.jpg

==========[ PALEKH ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Palekh_zps9b804fc5.jpg

==========[ RISQUE BEAUTIES ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/RisqueBeauties_zps914fbfdc.jpg

==========[ ROCKWELL INTERNATIONAL ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Rockwell_zps59c4381a.jpg

==========[ ROYAL REVELERS ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/RoyalRevelers_zps44fbcd7f.jpg

==========[ THE TAPE DECK ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/TheTapeDeck_zps7edca8d5.jpg

==========[ UFO ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/UFO_zps80fb70de.jpg

==========[ WADDINGTON'S XMAS ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/WaddingtonsXmas_zps9cce4ec7.jpg

==========[ WERERWOLF WILD WEST ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Werewolf_zps369e1ebe.jpg
If anyone has any questions about any of these decks, please post them here, and I will do my best to answer them!

-RSL

I was advised to add to this some of my recent posts in the "Hey, look what I just added to my collection!" Topic.

HERE'S ONE:
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
RSLancastr wrote:I have already posted here about an article about collecting playing cards" I wrote for MUM Magazine back in 2000/2001:
========== THE COVER ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Bob_Lancaster_pg_1_zps6af400b4.jpg

========== THE ARTICLE - PAGE 1 of 3 ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Bob_Lancaster_pg_2_zps1205dea1.jpg

========== THE ARTICLE - PAGE 2 of 3 ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Bob_Lancaster_pg_3_zpsb7e7e331.jpg

========== THE ARTICLE - PAGE 3 of 3 ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Bob_Lancaster_pg_4_zps141ce9df.jpg
My copy of the issue is most likely in a box out in our garage (the above scans were sent to me a year or two ago by someone at the magazine), and would be quite difficult to locate.

But look what I recently got on eBay:

CLICK TO VIEW LISTING

By the way, the "Sold For $19.99" is incorrect.

$19.99 was the minimum bid, "or best offer" - I offered $10.00, and it was accepted.
According to the tracking on USPS.com, it went out for delivery this morning from our local post office, so I should get it in today's mail - hooray!!
HERE'S ANOTHER:
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
RSLancastr wrote:As I believe I have mentioned here a time or two, the bulk of my entire collection of more than 2,400 decks of playing cards is in thirty or so BCW storage boxes, most of which are out in our garage.

Lugging them into our house is pretty difficult/awkward for me, but two days or so ago, I "bit the bullet" and brought one of them inside (no mean feat, given that I only have the use of one hand/arm, and am confined to a (motorized) wheelchair, but I did it!

I just picked one of them at random (they aren't labelled, that would make too much sense), carefully pulled it down using my one good hand, and tried placing it in my lap.

No good, my lap is quite small for some strange reason (my big gut), so I balanced the box on end, placed it between my feet on my wheelchair's footplate, negotiated the ramp up and out of the garage and into the house, back to my "office" (a spare bedroom where my computer and desk are), cut the tape on the box, and opened it - whew!

These boxes will each hold around eighty poker-sized decks, but the one I had picked contained only about fifty decks, due to the odd sizes of many of the boxes (double-deck sets and such). I looked through all of the tucks and such, and picked out ten decks to share with you.

Here they are, in alphabetic order, with only minimal comments from me, as I am bushed:

==========[ AltenburgStralsunder_SkatNr50 ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/AltenburgStralsunder_SkatNr50_zps8e9b5d99.jpg

==========[ Angel_Nippon ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Angel_Nippon_zps06065c1f.jpg

==========[ ArtForTheEarth ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/ArtForTheEarth_zps7e69e070.jpg

==========[ Babylon5 ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Babylon5_zpsb6270f85.jpg

==========[ Fournier_DiscoverersAndColonizersOfAmerica ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Fournier_DiscoverersAndColonizersOfAmerica_zps172ceb97.jpg

==========[ ICantBelieveItsNotButter ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/ICantBelieveItsNotButter_zps171962c4.jpg


==========[ MagicCastle_Blue ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/MagicCastle_Blue_zpsab27a9b8.jpg

==========[ TombRaider ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/TombRaider_zpsde99787a.jpg

==========[ Unknown_01 ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Unknown_01_zps91bf85dd.jpg

==========[ Uknown_Whist ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Uknown_Whist_zpsc644a232.jpg
HERE'S YET ANOTHER:
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
RSLancastr wrote:A few more "from the vault":

NOTE: Since I do not have access to my reference books, and am too lazy to do much Googling at the moment. my info I will write about each deck will largely be from memory, and thus, highly suspect in its detail. You Have Been Warned.


==========[ RoyalFlash_2 ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/RoyalFlash_2_zps6316fbbe.jpg
ABOUT THE DECK:
Published in 1974 by DuRite Enterprises, the Royal Flash deck is definitely a relic of its time. The suits in this drug-promoting deck are Marijuana, Peyote, Opium and Magic Mushrooms, and each jack, queen and king is partaking of the drug of their suit! To top it off, instead of a Joker, the deck has a Smoker.

In 1997, I used an image of the deck's "King of Marijuana" within the "Decks with Non-Standard Suits" exhibit on my old playing card web site. I later received an email from the gentleman from Du-Rite Enterprises, asking why I was displaying the card (This was 1997, and hobbyist/non-commercial web sites were not yet common, so he wondered if I was somehow making money from displaying cards as I did. I assured him that the site was simply for the love of cards, and he understood. We remained in occasional contact and, in around 1999, he told me that he wanted to reissue the deck, with some minor changes. Would I be interested in creating a simple web site where the new deck could be advertised? Sure! I put one together, and he was very pleased with it. When he asked how much he owed me, I suggested five copies of the reissued deck (I was doing it out of love for the hobby anyway), and he agreed.

He also added something to the deck without telling me:

Many of the court cards in the original edition have names "hidden" in the image. These were the first names of some of the people behind the creation of the deck, and some of their friends.

On one of the cards (I forget which) in the reissued version, my name ("BOB L" - since I went by "Bob" at the time) is hidden!

I don't recall the web site ever going live, and I haven't been in contact with the gentleman for several years now, but this highly-unusual and politically Incorrect deck has a place in my heart.

==========[ Sobranie_ArtOfErte ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Sobranie_ArtOfErte_zpsc46e0372.jpg
ABOUT THE DECK:

Sobranie, a high-end European cigarette brand, commissioned the famous artist Erte to design a deck of cards, and this was the result.
==========[ CamelCigarettes_75thBitrthday ]==========


http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/CamelCigarettes_75thBitrthday_zpsd9ec6890.jpg
ABOUT THE DECK:

Published in 1998 to celebrate the brand's 75th year, this deck boasts courts which look like Joe Camel borrowed the costumes and props from the courts of a USPCC deck. Not terribly creative, but a step above many advertising decks, which use standard courts.
==========[ LouisFeraud_1988 ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/LouisFeraud_1988_zpsa28eb8cd.jpg
ABOUT THE DECK:

Fashion designer Louis Feraud designed this deck in 1988.
==========[ AirIndia ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/AirIndia_zps2893b930.jpg
ABOUT THE DECK:

Apparently an airline deck, this one has striking, India-themed courts.
==========[ UFO_2 ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/UFO_2_zps0a245e56.jpg
ABOUT THE DECK:

A friend of mine brought this back for me from his trip to Vegas. I have t-shirts somewhere with some of the courts on them. Whoever designed the box really nailed the look and colors of UFO paperbacks from the 1970s...
==========[ BigDogs_2 ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/BigDogs_2_zpse05e3077.jpg
ABOUT THE DECK:

Here's how I described the deck on my site in 1996:

"Big Dog Sportswear is well known here in California for its line of products which feature their mascot, a big ol' black and white dog, in a variety of situations (my wife's favorite has him dressed as a Mexican bandito, above the phrase "Leashes?! We don't need no stinking leashes!!").

Recently, they published this deck of playing cards, in which their mascot stands in for the jacks, queens, kings and jokers! With its canine courts, leaping jokers and bright colors, this charming deck has quickly become a favorite of mine.

My favorite decks tend to be those in which the jacks, queens and kings are non-standard, and yet stick close to the conventions of the English/American pack. This deck fits that description very well (the major exception being a two-eyed jack of hearts).

Each of the court cards is a gentle send-up of the equivalent standard English/American card, resulting in a deck that is both very playable and very collectible. "

The deck was issued with at least two different backs. A Hawaiian-themed one was also availabled, in which the Dog courts were wearing leis, Hula Skirts and such.
==========[ Piatnik_BarajasEspañolas ]==========


http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Piatnik_BarajasEspantildeolas_zps9ab7c1a0.jpg
ABOUT THE DECK:

A fairly standard Spanish-suited (copas/cups, oros/gold coins, bastos/cudgles and espadas/swords) deck with Spanish courts (sotas/foot-solidiers, caballos/mounted-soldiers and Reys/Kings), I was puzzled by the deck's cuatro de oros (Four of Coins), on which "EL JOKEY" is displayed in a large and grand font. Was "El Jokey" the name of the deck? "Jokey" did not look Spanish to me, nor was it found in online translation tools. I consulted UC regular Eoghann, knowing that he speaks Spanish fluently and loves Spanish-suited decks, and asked him. He informed me that, while "Jokey" is indeed NOT a true Spanish word, some speakers of Spanish use it as a close approximation to the English word "Jockey". He said that "EL JOKEY" ("THE JOCKEY") was probably the name of the deck, as the four of coins is often used for that purpose (possibly due to all of the white space in the middle of that card). He further suggested that it might be inreference to Piatnik's corporate logo - a man riding a horse!

My thanks to Eoghann for his help with this.
AND I THINK THAT IS MORE THAN ENOUGH FROM ME!

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
A few more from the "vault":
==========[ Promo-Quebec ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Promo-Quebec_zps51693e16.jpg

==========[ JoinedAtTheHip ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/JoinedAtTheHip_zps1ccd5b11.jpg

==========[ RussiaHunting ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/RussiaHunting_zps870e66f3.jpg

==========[ ManyRiversToCross ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/ManyRiversToCross_zps5eb1e6f4.jpg
-Marcel Marceau
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RSLancastr
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

I feel like an egomaniac posting all of this, but Mike is encouraging me to do so, so here goes:

A couple of months ago, an onlne friend asked me when/how I had started such an unusual hobby.

People are always surprised by it, and say they have never even heard of the hobby (it ain't exactly stamp collecting, is it?).

In response to my online friend I wrote the following, and thought I would share it with you all here at UC.

It's pretty long, but I hope to insert some scans of cards to make it more interesting.

-RSL

HOW I STARTED THIS ADDICTION - ER, COLLECTION


=====[ 1968 - MY FIRST DECK (AN INNOCENT ENOUGH BEGINNING) ]=====

In 1968 or 1969, when I was ten or eleven years old, my mother and I walked into a Hallmark Cards store in a local mall (we lived in Los Angeles County). She told me we could buy something for me as long as it was inexpensive (I think she said "less than a dollar"), so I started looking around for something that would catch my eye, and found a display of little boxes of decks of miniature playing cards. At the time, I enjoyed having kid-sized versions of things which I thought of as for adults, and these cards certainly fit the bill! Our family played lots of cards (mostly Rummy), and my siblings and I also played lots of Klondike Solitaire (we simply called it "Solitaire"), but the cards had aways been bit large for my (kid-sized) hands.

Back at the Hallmark Store: I looked at all of the boxes of miniature card decks, and they seemed to be just the right size for my hands! The boxes were all sealed, so I looked at the images on them, figuring that what was on them would also be on the back of the cards.

Most of the images were pretty boring (landscapes, flowrs, horses, etc.) until I found one which really caught my eye: it was drawing of Snoopy on his dog house, against a "psychedelic" background of orange and yellow! I loved Snoopy (who didn't?), and the "psychedelic" design was cool (or I guess I would have thought it was "groovy" - it was the 1960s!). I showed them to my mother, and she hesitantly approved the purchase (I believe they were all of 75 cents). We bought them and left the store.

I opened them when we got home, and was, at first, disappointed that the Jacks, Queens and Kings in the deck were not the ones I was used to seeing. No, they were portrayed by the Peanuts Characters Linus, Lucy and Charlie Brown! The Jokers had Snoopy, wearing a jester's hat, juggling three balls and a dizzy Woodstock.

Even the Aces featured Snoopy again - dressed up as the World War I Flying Ace, of course!

http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Peanuts_zpsbca90a0a.jpg

Although initially disappointed that the deck was not just a kid-sized version of an adult's deck, I came to enjoy the deck and its unusual courts (we called them the "face cards" back then), jokers and aces. My friends and I played countless games of Rummy on the floor of my bedroom with that deck.

Eventually the deck, in its box, ended up in a dresser drawer where I kept small playthings I no longer used.

=====[ 1978 - MY SECOND DECK (THE ADDICTION GROWS) ]=====

I know the exact date I purchased the second deck in what later became my collection: December 16, 1978.

I remember the date because it was the day after I married my first wife (at the age of twenty).

We went to Disneyland the day after our wedding for a "honeymoon" of sorts.

As we walked down Main Street in the park, we passed a glass booth on the sidewalk in front of a store. The booth contained a mannequin dressed as a gypsy fortuneteller, and was seated with a crystal ball and a spread of playing cards which she was studying intently. If you put some coins into a slot, the mannequin started moving and a recording played, in which she told your fortune.

As we looked at the display, I suddenly noticed that the playing cards in front of the "gypsy" were unusual - The Jacks, Queens and Kings were portrayed by Donald Duck, Minnie Mouse and Mickey Mouse, and the Joker was Goofy (of course)!

http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Disney_zps73ae63a7.jpg

Reminded of my Peanuts playing cards, I wondered if the deck was for sale somewhere in the park. We went into the store the glass case was in front of and, sure enough, the deck was sold there (with either a blue or red back). I purchased one and tossed it into the bag with our other souvenirs of the day.

The next day at home, I pulled the deck out of its box and examined the cards. I wanted to compare it with my Peanuts deck, so I pulled THAT out of its box (I still had it in a box containing some of my favorite childhood things (okay, so I'm a packrat).

As I compared the two decks I started to wonder: could there be other decks out there with unusual "face cards", perhaps depicting other cartoon characters? If so, wouldn't that be a cool thing to collect?

I mentioned this to my wife Cindy, and she said that she had seen some unusual face cards in decks she had seen during her frequent visits to antique stores and thrift stores. I had gone to such stores with her a time or two and been bored out of my skull. But I asked her if I could go with her the next time she went, and thus started more than twenty years of the two of us scouring antique stores/malls, with me opening and looking at every non-sealed deck of cards they had for sale.

I soon found that there were MANY decks with unusual "face cards", and not just depicting cartoon characters!

Some showed portraits of famous people (royalty, politicians, actors, etc). Others depicted characters from literature (Shakespeare, Melville, Mother Goose, etc), advertising mascots (The Pep Boys, "Snap, Crackle and Pop", etc), and more! I bought all the ones I found.

The decks with advertising mascots made me wonder if any then-current companies were still producing such decks. This led to my stopping in at various stores and asking if they sold unusual decks of playing cards.

This usually got me strange looks from sales clerks, with confused responses like "No, this is a clothing store!" (with an implied "...you idiot!" at the end).

But every once in a while there would be a payoff. I asked at a Big Dog clothing store once, and the clerk said "No...wait! hold a sec, let me check something..." She went into the back and came out with a handful of decks of cards! "We just go these in last week, and didn't know where to put them. Afe they what you are looking for?

I opened one and - paydirt! The Jacks, Queens, Kings and Jokers were all portrayed by the chain's mascot, a large black-and-white, St. Bernardish dog!

http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/BigDogs_zps80dbde11.jpg

Other times I would see a store which, while it did not have a mascot character, had a "theme" which I could easily see used to design an unusual card deck around. I would walk in and ask "Do you happen to sell any playing cards?". Again, probably 99 out of a hundred clerks would look at me as though I was insane for even asking, but that one out of a hundred made it all worthwhile!

Once, while strolling through a mall on my lunch hour, I saw a store which sold Afrocentric merchandise (African-styled clothing and such).

I immediately thought how cool it would be if there was a deck of playing cards where the face cards were black people!

I walked into the store and went to the clerk in the back, getting a few suspicious looks from other customers on the way (I was the only white person there).
The clerk also gave me a "what are YOU doing here?" Look.

A conversation went something like this:

Her: Can I help you with something?
Me: Yes. I was wondering if you sold any playing cards.
Her: Playing cards? No!! (again, the "...you idiot" was strongly implied)
Me: Oh, okay. I just thought you might have one where the face cards were black people.
Her: Oh, I see. OH, WAIT A SEC!!

(She rummaged around under the counter and came up with a handful of decks of cards. I opened one and - sure enough, the Jacks, Queens and Kings were not only black, but were dressed in African clothing!

Me: Yes, these are EXACTLY what I was looking for!
Her: We just got them in, and I didn't know where to display them...

I bought one. They were made by a company called Blacks Factor (a take-off on the company Max Factor).

http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/BlacksFactor_zps0e8eacbe.jpg

The clerk was bemused, probably wondering why a white man was so jazzed to have found such a deck...

By this time it was around 1985. I only had about fifteen or twenty decks in my collection, but was confident there were many more out there - but, how to find them?

=====[ A NEW PLACE TO LOOK ]=====

By the mid 1990s, I was working as a contract computer programmer at Buena Vista Home Video, the video arm of the Disney Corporation.

It was a large (for the time) "cubicle farm" in a building in Burbank, California.

Not surprisingly, there was Disney-themed stuff on display everywhere there. Even some of the employees' cubicles displayed items from their personal collections of Disneyana. I mentioned my Disney deck to one of them who was an absolute nut about Disney (his entire home was decorated, floor to ceiling with his collection of Disneyana), and he urged me to bring in the deck to display it in my cubicle.

I didn't want to just pin or tape the cards up in my cube, so I found some plexiglass frames which were made to display Baseball cards - four to a frame.

I bought five of them.

I loaded four of them with the J,Q,K & A from the four suits in the Disney deck, and loaded the fifth with a Joker, a card Back, and two small printouts I had made of a wrieup I had done about the deck and my collection.

I brought these five frames to work the following Monday morning and hung them up in my cubicle.

Throughout the day, as people stopped into my cubicle to speak with me about this or that, they would comment on the cards, intrigued by my hobby. More often than not, after they left the cubicle they would later return, bringing another employee with them to see the cards. Soon, people I did not even know were stopping in just to see the cards they had heard about!

Throughout that week, many of the people who had seen the cards told me that they would like to see cards from other decks in my collection!

Be careful asking a collector to show you their collection - you just might get what you asked for!

That Friday I took the frames back home.

Over the weekend I chose another deck from my collection (I think it was the Blacks Factor deck), loaded up the frames from it, and took them to work the following Monday morning, where I hung them again in my cubicle. I also composed an email about the deck and sent it out to all of the people who had expressed an interest in seeing other cards from my collection.

By lunch, most of them had stopped by, looked at the cards and, often, came back with someone else to show the cards to! People really seemed to love looking at playing cards!

From then on, it became a regular start to every workweek: I brought in cards from another deck, put them in the frames, and sent out an email announcing "this week's deck". Often, within an hour of my sending the email, there would be a line of people standing outside my cubicle waiting to see the cards!

Someone joked that it was almost like visiting an art gallery exhibit, and joked that I should get a velvet rope/cordon to keep the waiting line organized.

I started heading each Monday's announcement email "This week's exhibit at The Bob Lancaster Gallery of Unusual Playing Cards" and would print out information about that week's "exhibit" and placed it on an easel next to the frames. This went on for months!

Along about this time, I had been hearing about this new "Internet thing" and joined AOL so that I could take a look.

One of the first things I did on the internet was to search for information about playing cards, but all that was out there then was about PLAYING with playing cards, not COLLECTING them.

I did find eBay (back then it was called Auction Web), and got many unusual decks by winning auctions there.

My contract at BVHV expired (I had been there more than three years at that point), and I was sad that I no longer had a place to share some of my collection with people.

Frustrated that I was finding no web sites for playing card collectors on the Internet, I decided to look into creating one myself! I had been a professional computer programmer for almost twenty years at that point, so I figured "how hard could it be?" and, with those famous last words, I dove into learning HTML, the only way at the time to create a web site. (This was before blogging and such had made it possible for a non-technical person to create web sites).

I caught on fairly quickly, and used the web space which came as part of my AOL account to create a display of cards from four oif the decks from my collection (including the Disney deck and the Blacks Factor deck).

Since I wanted it to be much like what I had done with my cards at BVHV, I named the web site "The Bob Lancaster Gallery of Unusual Playing Cards" too!

As I added more deck displays to the web site (initially, I tried to add at least one every month), I started getting email from others who also collected playing cards - I wasn't the only person with the hobby!!

Through some of these fellow collectors I learned about - and later joined - card collector clubs, such as 52+J (52 Plus Joker, a group focusing on decks published in America) and the IPCS (International Playing Card Society)

Through these organizations - and through my email contacts from my web site - I grew to find that there was faaar more to the hobby than I had imagined, and that there were card collectors all around the globe!

In 1997 I was invited to speak at the annual convention of 52+J, where I spoke on "How to Use the Internet in Collecting Playing Cards"

Few people present there had much experience on the Internet, and many were amazed when I brought up on my projection screen images of my site, eBay auctions of playing cards, a few sites where vendors sold collectible cards, and images of the web site I had just created for 52+J itself!

(I had sold the club's officers on my creating the site in a meeting where they asked me questions like "Do you really think this Internet is going to catch on?" and "Do you really think that people will use the Internet to find information about their hobbies?" (Remember, this was 1997)).

During the presentation, people in the audience Ooohed and Aaahed at the images of playing cards, and asked me lots and lots of questions as they started realizing that there was more to the Internet than they had thought, and that it might be of use to them!

There are many other stories I could tell about my card-collecting adventures, such as my touring playing card museums in Europe, my attempt to design a Transformation deck, a playing card I designed being on display in a museum in Vittoria, Spain, and much more, but I've blathered on far too long already, so I will end with this:

Collecting playing cards is a hobby rich in history and variety, and which has helped me to form lasting friendships with fellow collectors and vendors in countries all over the world.

NOTE:

All of the images in this post are from the archive.org copy of my old, now-defunct, web site.
They were all scanned using a mouse-like hand-held scanner (a painstaking process neccesary before flatbed scanners became affordable to me).
-Marcel Marceau
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Re: The "Hey, look what I added to my collection!" thread

Unread post by RSLancastr »

A few more from the "vault":
==========[ Promo-Quebec ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Promo-Quebec_zps51693e16.jpg

==========[ JoinedAtTheHip ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/JoinedAtTheHip_zps1ccd5b11.jpg

==========[ RussiaHunting ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/RussiaHunting_zps870e66f3.jpg

==========[ ManyRiversToCross ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/ManyRiversToCross_zps5eb1e6f4.jpg
-Marcel Marceau
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

Four more "from the vault":
==========[ Michelin ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Michelin_zps6f106ea9.jpg

==========[ Palekh_2 ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Palekh_2_zps40b3c42d.jpg

==========[ BourgeoisTarock ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/BourgeoisTarock_zps034652c4.jpg

==========[ RoyalHawaii_2 ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/RoyalHawaii_2_zpsc8c8ead6.jpg
-Marcel Marceau
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by montecarlojoe »

I know this is only the tiniest fraction of what you have - but damn it's impressive! :)
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by Mike Ratledge »

montecarlojoe wrote:I know this is only the tiniest fraction of what you have - but damn it's impressive! :)
No kidding, Joe! There maybe two decks in this entire page that I've even seen, much less owned. I do have one of them.

Really good job, Robert I'll echo Joe's words: "IMPRESSIVE!!".
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by dazzleguts »

Hey RS, is that Cocktails deck one of the aluminum decks made back when aluminum was the latest great discovery? I've always wanted an aluminum deck.

You have really got to get those other boxes out of the garage. I was starting to wonder if I would run out of old decks to find but there's only 8 of those decks of yours in my own stash. And I would really love to find the Alien Poker, Blacks Factor, Card Tricks, Rockwell International...etc... :P

The article image is cut off on the right for me, and since clicking on it doesn't bring up the full image I can't read that part.
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by Sher »

I really enjoyed reading your article and looking at the different cards. :) I also liked reading about the story of how you started collecting. I'm very much interested in transformation decks.
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

montecarlojoe wrote:I know this is only the tiniest fraction of what you have - but damn it's impressive! :)
Thanks, mcj!
Mike Ratledge wrote:
montecarlojoe wrote:I know this is only the tiniest fraction of what you have - but damn it's impressive! :)
No kidding, Joe! There maybe two decks in this entire page that I've even seen, much less owned. I do have one of them.

Really good job, Robert I'll echo Joe's words: "IMPRESSIVE!!".
Thanks, Mike! But seriously - you've been to 52+J conventions and haven't seen these?
dazzleguts wrote:Hey RS, is that Cocktails deck one of the aluminum decks made back when aluminum was the latest great discovery? I've always wanted an aluminum deck.
Yes it is, Dazz! Here is my description of it from my old web site (The Bob Lancaster Gallery of Unusual Playing Cards):
BLGUPC wrote:
BLGUPC Presents:

COCKTAILS PATIENCE

"NATURAL ALUMINUM PLAYING CARDS"

The Deck

Although aluminum is the third most common element on earth, it always occurs chemically joined to another metal. Prior to 1886, extracting aluminum from other metals was a costly endeavor, making the refined metal nearly as precious as gold. But it was in that year that a cheap process for such extraction was invented, and suddenly, everyday items started being made out of aluminum which would have been unthinkably expensive before.

Some of these items were actually better suited to the older, more traditional materials, but creating them out of aluminum was a novelty. One such novelty item was aluminum playing cards, decks of which were sold as souvenirs at World's Fairs in the 1890's. The cards were easily bent and scratched, and soon the novelty wore off. Not many aluminum decks were made after that.

This deck, made in the 1920's by Hauserman, was unusual, even for an aluminum deck: Its courts are non-standard, featuring art deco depictions of the rich crowd. Also, it is a "patience-sized" deck, being only 1 5/8" x 2 3/8" (the images have been enlarged here to allow for better viewing).

The box reads "NATURAL ALUMINUM PLAYING CARDS - COCKTAIL SERIES - CHARLES L. KING - NEW YORK, N.Y - Made in Austria".


The Cards on Display
•The Ace of Hearts - The insignia reads "A-S-K - AUSTRIA"

•The King of Clubs - A pipe-smoking, rather surly old gent.

•The Jack of Diamonds - All ready to ride a polo pony.

•The Queen of Spades - A glamorous lady.

•The Joker - In this deck, even the joker is rich!

•The Card back - A nice art deco design.
Dazzleguts wrote: You have really got to get those other boxes out of the garage. I was starting to wonder if I would run out of old decks to find but there's only 8 of those decks of yours in my own stash. And I would really love to find the Alien Poker, Blacks Factor, Card Tricks, Rockwell International...etc... :P

The article image is cut off on the right for me, and since clicking on it doesn't bring up the full image I can't read that part.
Try adjusting your browser's "Zoom" setting (Ctrl+ and Ctrl- or Alt-V, Z in IE) to make the image fit on your screen.
Sher143 wrote:I really enjoyed reading your article and looking at the different cards. :) I also liked reading about the story of how you started collecting. I'm very much interested in transformation decks.
Thanks, Sher - I'm glad you enjoyed them! And I love transformation decks - I hope to create one some day!
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by montecarlojoe »

Try adjusting your browser's "Zoom" setting (Ctrl+ and Ctrl- or Alt-V, Z in IE) to make the image fit on your screen.
Or pinch zoom if on mobile device ;)

RSL - you can also use the [ucimg] tag instead of the normal [img] tag, and that will resize the pic to a size manageable by most browsers and allow you to click to see full size
(I'll change it for the article - hope you dont mind :) )
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

I don't mind at all, mcj - Thanks, and thanks for the tip!
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by vasta41 »

Wow, way to kick this section off with a bang! Thank God it's a month long- so many decks!! And tons of information.. bravo and keep up the good work! I'm very impressed.
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

vasta41 wrote:Wow, way to kick this section off with a bang! Thank God it's a month long- so many decks!! And tons of information.. bravo and keep up the good work! I'm very impressed.
Thanks, vasta (I'll assume you were talking to me...)

One reason I may have been selected as the first Featured Collector is that, as many here know, I am by no means shy about blathering on and on (and on and on and on) about myself and my collection, making for lots of material here! :D
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

And no egomaniacal thread about yours truly would be complete without a link to the Wikipedia entry about... me:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_S._Lancaster

Although it is primarily about things other than playing cards, it does have a link (see "External Links" at the bottom of the page) to an archive.org (The "Wayback Machine") copy of my old (circa 1996-2003) web site ("The Bob Lancaster Gallery of Unusual Playing Cards") which people here might enjoy.

WARNING: My old web site is VERY "Old-school" (read: simple, compared to today's web sites). Also, many of the images of cards are missing in the Wayback Machine's archived copy of it.

Enjoy,

-RSL
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by Mike Ratledge »

vasta41 wrote:Wow, way to kick this section off with a bang! Thank God it's a month long- so many decks!! And tons of information.. bravo and keep up the good work! I'm very impressed.
Vasta41, due to the time constraints and by popular demand & requests, after I posted the original message announcement about the UC Featured Artists & Collectors, it was self-evident that one month just won't cut it. Featured Artist and Collector will all be two months, and alternate every other month. Robert is our Featured Collector until the end of April, and Jackson doesn't start as Featured Artist until April and continues until the end of May. I'll announce the next person for each side soon, Collector for May/June in about two weeks and the second Featured Artist in about 6.

That let's us swap one or the other every month - but not both. We'll have 6 of each every year!
I didn't know it for sure earlier today, but I got confirmation from three people this afternoon, so we have featured colectors through the end of August and featured artists through end of September already. If you would like to suggest someone for either, send me a PM.
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

Two more "from the vault":
==========[ JacobsBibleCards_Original ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/JacobsBibleCards_Original_zps3d7936ac.jpg

==========[ JacobsBibleCards_Modern ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/JacobsBibleCards_Modern_zps0b5da704.jpg
-Marcel Marceau
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by Mike Ratledge »

I've got a JB deck that looks like the first one, but red back - same design?

Finally got another one... ;-)
>Mike<
"You can't please everyone, so you've got to please yourself"
They say "Ignorance is bliss". Obviously, some people are much happier than others...

Members are encouraged to
Show Us Your Cards!


Our UC2021 Decks entitled
"Odd Fellows"
by Lorenzo Gaggiotti / @Stockholm17
Coming soon: AKA
«Eighth Annual Decks»


UC members help maintain Portfolio52
THE Playing Card Database Online
Contact ecNate for details and access


UC2019 "Seventh Annual Decks"
by Montenzi Design
Funded 207% on KS: HERE


>>> UC Deck Sales <<<


Insert disclaimer here...
All information posted as fact is accurate at the time of posting to the best of my knowledge.
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

Mike Ratledge wrote:I've got a JB deck that looks like the first one, but red back - same design?
That one was done with at least two different-colored backs - a purple one and a green one. Would not surprise me if there was a red-backed one as well.

By the way, that deck was the "descendant" of the "Palestine Play-cards" deck (my favorite deck in my collection). They were both designed and drawn by Israeli artist Ze'ev Raban. The earlier one had single-ended (full-figure) courts, square corners, and the aforementioned Judaic suit-signs (Star of David, Menorah, Fig Leaf and Pomegranate).
Mike Ratledge wrote:Finally got another one... ;-)
Hooray!! :)
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by Sparkz »

Wow, to say your collection is amazing would be an understatement Robert, lol. Great read and very nice addition to the site Mr. Ratledge!
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

Sparkz wrote:Wow, to say your collection is amazing would be an understatement Robert, lol. Great read and very nice addition to the site Mr. Ratledge!
Thanks, Sparkz!
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by Lotrek »

I second Sparkz. Very impressive and interesting collection. I love the way you describe your passion Robert!
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

Lotrek wrote:I second Sparkz. Very impressive and interesting collection. I love the way you describe your passion Robert!
My wife said the same thing to me when we were first dating!

(and I wasn't even talking about playing cards at the time...) ;)

Actually, one of the first times she and I visited face-to-face (we had met on match.com and had "courted" for a few months via emails, online chats and phone conversations), she asked me if I had any hobbies. When I told her that I collected decks of playing cards, SHE LAUGHED IN MY FACE, thinking that I was kidding! (I guess it stuck her as about as exciting as Bert (on Sesame Street)'s beloved paper clip collection).

I assured her that I was not joking, and told her about my web site devoted to the hobby. She asked me to email her a link to it, and I did. She spent much of the next day exploring my site and reading my descriptions of the decks displayed there. She emailed me and said that she had been surprised that I had actually made it all sound interesting!

The next time I dropped by her place, I brought a small box containing maybe a dozen of my favorite decks in my collection, and showed them to her. As she looked at them, she said things like "These are so beautiful!" and "I can see why you collect them!"

So I forgave her for laughing at my hobby.
-Marcel Marceau
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

I just posted this in another thread, but here is an archive.org copy of a page on the old 52 Plus Joker web site where I put scans of that "Palestine Play-cards" deck I've mentioned a few times as my favorite in my collection:

https://web.archive.org/web/20060527155 ... /index.htm
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by Jock1971 »

Hi there Robert, i would like to say Many Thanks for agreeing to be the first featured collector and showing some of your card collection, Fantastic. Not only are the cards you`ve shown so far excellent but the stories are great ,i would love to hear more,especially about your trips to europe and about the decks you have designed. i can`t imagine how you could choose a favorite deck from the thousands you own but am looking forward to see the Palestine cards you`ve mentioned. Again thank you so much for sharing you`re collection as i`ll probably never see most of them anywhere else. Truly unbelievable. Thanks
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

Jock1971 wrote:Hi there Robert, i would like to say Many Thanks for agreeing to be the first featured collector and showing some of your card collection, Fantastic. Not only are the cards you`ve shown so far excellent but the stories are great ,i would love to hear more,especially about your trips to europe and about the decks you have designed. i can`t imagine how you could choose a favorite deck from the thousands you own but am looking forward to see the Palestine cards you`ve mentioned. Again thank you so much for sharing you`re collection as i`ll probably never see most of them anywhere else. Truly unbelievable. Thanks
Jock:

First, thanks so much for the kind words. My posting in this thread has been an honor and a pleasure.

Second, be careful what you wish for: you just might get it.

Second.1: As for scans of the "Palestine Play-card" deck, the post just before yours contains a link to a page I created in 1997 with scans from that deck, but here is one of my "grids" of a few cards from the deck:
==========[ PalestinePlay-cards ]==========
http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/PalestinePlay-cards_zps0fbebafc.jpg
Second.2: as for stories of my trips to Europe, the only card-related story I can think of at the moment is rather anti-climactic (to everyone but me, anyway):

I was at a client in Netherlands in 1999 when I learned of a convention of playing card collectors being held that weekend in Turnhout, Belgium (the home town of publishers Carta Mundi). I rented a car, filled up the tank, and drove there.

When I got to the venue, I was grabbed by a fellow collector who lived in Amsterdam, but who knew me through my hobby-related web site ("The Bob Lancaster Gallery of Unusual Playing Cards")., and we went to a nearby pub to have lunch.

As we were eating, another collector walked up to talk with my friend, who introduced me as "Mr. Lancaster". The collector who had just been introduced to me was well known in the hobby for his incredible collection of WW2-related decks, which was then touring museums around Europe.

At some point in our conversation, my friend called me "Bob", at which point the other collector said "Wait a minute!" and pointed at me, while he put it together:

"Bob...Lancaster? THE BOB LANCASTER?!!?"

My friend and I laughed and nodded our heads.

It was a surreal moment for me. Here I was at a little, out-of-the way restaurant on the other side of the globe from where I lived, and this man - who was super-well-known within the hobby, was acting as though I was a huge celebrity or something!

When we got into the convention, there were similar (though far less dramatic) reactions as I made my way around the room, and the news that I was there started to spread.

It's sort of hard to imagine nowadays, but to have a web site was a new and pretty unusual thing back then, and mine was one of the very first, perhaps THE first, devoted to the hobby, which made me a bit of a celebrity among collectors back then.

Second.3: As far as decks I have designed, I have a story about a deck I started designing (but never finished) which is faaar too long to add to this post, so it will have to wait for later.

again though - thanks!

-RSL
-Marcel Marceau
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by Jock1971 »

Hi there Robert. Thanks for that story.
I only seriously began thinking about collecting cards about 6 Months ago.i have cards from my other passion Sci-fi .i.e 5 decks of Doctor Who cards.A few star trek etc but only recently began noticing Bicycle decks and finally after buying a deck of Anne stokes - Dark hearts became hooked. By the way The Babylon 5 set you`ve shown looks awesome i`ll look out for that one.
So you`re tales of your "pioneering days" are very interesting to me ,i can`t imagine what collecting cards was like before the internet as the only cards where i grew up (Scotland)was at the local shop and even then if they had some it would most often be the basic Waddington`s set and no printed material like magazines or books ,Thank you again for telling your stories .even though you`ve probably talked about them a million times there`s always someone who hasn`t hear them and is grateful to you for sharing.
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

Thanks again, Jock!

What follows is a probably too-long story about a deck of cards I started designing back around 1999.

I originally wrote the story a year or two ago, to be posted on another, non-card-related forum I've frequented since 2001.

The fact that the people who frequent that forum are not collectors of playing cards might explain why I put some detail into the post which might not have been necessary had I written it specifically for a forum like UC, populated by playing card collectors.

Here goes:
RSLancastr wrote: Okay, here's yet another long and involved story from me. It will seem disjointed, but please bear with me - each
part is a piece of the puzzle.

First, as I have mentioned here many times, I have a large (around 2,000 decks) collection of decks of unusual
playing cards. Here is a link to an archive of my now-defunct web site devoted to the hobby:

http://web.archive.org/web/200703251924 ... blgupc.htm

After I had collected for a couple of years, I wanted to design and create a deck.
Trouble was, I have zero artistic skills. I could (and did) come up with the concept and design for a deck, but
hadn't the ability to execute that design. A friend who is a professional artist started drawing one of my designs, but that project sorta ran out of steam.

One type of deck that I wanted to design was what is known as a Transformation deck, in which the pips
(hearts, clubs, diamonds and spades) in each card were incorporated into a picture. kind of hard to describe,
but here is the archived copy of the page on my old web site which describes them and has some examples:

http://web.archive.org/web/200702160410 ... m/deck.htm

If that doesn't load, here is a page on Transformation Playing Cards on Wiki:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transforma ... aying_card

Notice that some in some Transformation cards, the Pips are located and oriented where they are on a standard
deck. By "oriented", I mean whether the pip is rightside-up or upside-down. On a standard deck, the pips
above the center of the card are rightside-up. those below it are upside-down. Those directly on the center
(such as the center pip on a Five) are generally rightside-up.. designing/drawing the cards so that the objects
representing the pips are shaped, sized, located and oriented as they would be on a standard deck is quite a
challenge. There are some quite lovely transformation decks where the artist has taken liberties with these
things, such as the Keys to the Kingdom deck on the above Wiki page (the card where the clubs are the heads of mice running on the floor), but I wanted to create a "true" transformation deck, as the challenge of the proper location
and orientation intrigued me. .

But, again, my lack of drawing skills prevented me from creating such a deck.

From about 1993-1997 I worked as an independent computer programmer for Buena Vista Home Video (BVHV), the video division of Disney. It was a fun place to work, and hardly a month went by without them handing out some sales giveaway trinket (buttons, coffe mugs, pens, etc) related to the latest film or video released by Disney or its various film partners.

Every year around Christmas, they took us all to a movie theater and would show us trailers for (and clips from)
some of the films they would be releasing in the coming year.

In December of 1994, they showed us trailers for several films, but the only ones I recall were While You Were
Sleeping
and Toy Story. This was the original Toy Story, and was the first time I had seen that type of 3D
rendered Computer graphics on film.

The clip they showed us was from the opening sequence where Woody and the other toys were spying on the
children arriving for the birthday party. The makers of the film hadn't yet decided how to render the human
characters in a way that would make them very different from the toy characters, so the portions of the clip with
humans (such as the children arriving for the party) were still, charcoal drawings, used to show the scenes to
investors and such.

It was while watching this clip that it dawned on me: Every frame of this film was drawn not by hand, but by a
computer! And, since I programmed computers for a living, if I could find an affordable program which would run
on my IBM PC/XT which could create images like those in the film, perhaps my lack of drawing skills needn't
prevent me from creating a deck of cards!

I started doing web searches for 3D-Rendering (the technique used in Toy Story, and found a program called POV-Ray which did 3D rendering on a PC! And was downloadable for free! I downloaded it at

http://www.povray.org/

Not only was it free, and would even run (though EXTREMELY slowly) on my IBM XT, but it required even less in the way of drawing abilities than I had hoped! It was essentially a programming/graphic language, in which you describe objects in geometric terms, place them (and lights and the "camera" in a 3D space (using X, Y and Z
coordinates), then run that code through POV-Ray, which would then render it into a .bmp graphic! I COULD DO
THIS!!

I dove into learning the language, and used it to create some (very) simple images. And I mean SIMPLE.

Ray-tracing, the method used by POV-Ray, is very math-intensive, so running it on an XT was.....slow. As in, it
would take hours (literally) to render sample images which should have rendered in less than one minute.

One of the first ideas I had for a transformation card rendered for more than 24 hours straight before I stopped it, incomplete. So I ended up shelving the project until I could upgrade my computer to something with more
processing power.

I upgraded my PC's processor a time or two, but it wasn't until 1998 that I bought something with enough power to really render complex POV-Ray scenes in an acceptable time frame. I came up with interesting ideas for various cards, and was pleased at some of the results. I shared images of some of the cards with some of my fellow playing card collectors, printing some out and taking them to the annual convention of 52 Plus Joker (52+J), a collector organization I belonged to. They were well-received. People seemed to love them, and they urged me to finish the deck and seek a publisher for it. A publisher was there, who said that he loved the cards, but was not sure he could sell enough of such a deck to make a profit on it.

In 1999 I received an unrelated letter from the International Playing Card Society (the IPCS). another collector
organization. They were going to publish a deck in 2000 to commemorate the past hundred years of playing card history, and were sending a letter to 56 members asking for their help. The idea was to assign each of those members ONE card from the deck (52 cards plus four jokers). eacf of us was to find a card of that suit and
denomination from our collection, and send it (or a high-resolution scan of it) to the man who was organizing the project/deck.

To ensure a variety of cards were included, members from a wide variety of countries were selected, and each of us was instructed to choose our assigned card from a deck published in our country. To further insure a variety, some of us were asked to choose a card published in the first half of the 20th century, the others, one from the second half of the century. I was assigned tha Five of Clubs. So I had to find a Five of Clubs from a deck published in the United States sometime between 1950 and 1999. I looked through the more than 1,000 decks in my collection, looking for any Five of Clubs I thought worthy of inclusion in the project. The focus of my collection was (and is) decks with "non-standard/custom courts" (unusual Jacks, Queens and Kings), so the majority of decks in it have a plain, ordinary Five of Clubs. None of the non-standard Fives of Clubs I found (such as those within transformation decks) really "grabbed" me. I looked through my designs for MY transformation deck project. Since it was unpublished, it didn't meet the two main criteria (a deck published in the USA, a deck published between 1950 and 1999) Plus, I was only about a third of the way into the project, and had not created a Five of Clubs yet!

But I HAD created a SIX of Clubs, and, with a bit of tweaking, I could make it a Five. I wrote to the man who
was in charge of the project and asked if a card from an as-yet-unpublished deck would be acceptable. He
replied that he felt it was a great idea, and thought that, although the deck was a celebration of cards from the
century that was coming to a close, including a card from an as-yet-unpublished deck woulg be a sort of nod to
decks to be published in the upcoming century. So I tweaked my Six of Clubs and made it a Five (actually, I think that it worked BETTER as the Five!) I sent it off to the man in charge of the project, and he loved it. He asked what the name of the deck was going to be, and I, ever the optimist, said that it would be published the next year as Transformation 2000.

Later in 2000, the IPCS deck celebrating the past 100 Years was published, and copies were given out to attendees at the 2000 joint convention of 52+J and the IPCS in New Haven, CT. The deck came in a box with a small book.

The book had a two-page spread for each card in the deck. the left page had a picture of the card, the right page had a write-up about the card, the deck it came from, and the collecfor whose collection it was from.

The deck itself was slightly oversized, with the image of the collector's card centered in it. After several years of collecting cards, and working for months on my own design, it was quite a feeling to actually hold in my hand a professionally-published playing card of my own design! Later, at that same convention, the keynote speaker was a man who was the curator for the Fournier P)laying Card Museum in Vittoria, Spain. He announced during his speech that the "celebration of 100 Years" deck was going to be on permanent display at the museum!

So, one little piece of my "art" is evidently on display in a museum! Perhaps some day I will go see it.

My transformation deck was never published. In fact, I never completed it. Not long after the IPCS "100-year deck" was published, my then-wife Cindy announced that she wanted a divorce, and I couldn't talk her out of it. The following year before she filed the papers and moved out, was horrific, and drained me of all creative juices. My transformation deck was one of many projects, such as my playing card web site, that all fell by the wayside due to the toll the divorce took on me.

Writing all this up has renewed my interest in complete the deck, but All of my files for the project - the POV-Ray source code AND the rendered images - are on a computer drive to which I currently do not have access.
starting the project over from scratch at this point is just...unthinkable. I have two copies of the "hundred year" deck around here somewhere. If I find one of them, I will scan the Five of Clubs and post it in this thread.
I'm quite proud of it, but it really isn't worth all of the build-up I've ended up giving it here.
-RSL
After I posted that, I added the following over time:
RSLancastr wrote:Good News!

I was chatting on FB with my friend Gina Pace last night.

Gina and I met online back in the 1990s, when I had my web site
about my playing card collection, and she had a web site about
her tarot card collection. We became good friends through our
related hobbies. When I was working on my Transformation
deck. I had emailed her images of some of the cards.

So, last night on FB I asked her if she remembered the deck,
and she said that she still had some of the images! I asked her
to email them to me, and she did! Few of them were at or near
completion, and most are fairly small, so I could email them to
her. I hesitate to share them here, after all the build-up I've given
them, but...what the heck. I will upload a few of them over the
next few posts.

Enjoy!
-Marcel Marceau
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

Thanks again, Jock!

What follows is a probably too-long story about a deck of cards I started designing back around 1999.

I originally wrote the story a year or two ago, to be posted on another, non-card-related forum I've frequented since 2001.

The fact that the people who frequent that forum are not collectors of playing cards might explain why I put some detail into the post which might not have been necessary had I written it specifically for a forum like UC, populated by playing card collectors.

Here goes:
RSLancastr wrote: Okay, here's yet another long and involved story from me. It will seem disjointed, but please bear with me - each
part is a piece of the puzzle.

First, as I have mentioned here many times, I have a large (around 2,000 decks) collection of decks of unusual
playing cards. Here is a link to an archive of my now-defunct web site devoted to the hobby:

http://web.archive.org/web/200703251924 ... blgupc.htm

After I had collected for a couple of years, I wanted to design and create a deck.
Trouble was, I have zero artistic skills. I could(and did) come up with the concept and design for a deck, but
hadn't the ability to execute that design. A friend who is a professional artist started drawing one of my designs,
but that project sorta ran out of steam.
One type of deck that I wanted to design was what is known as a Transformation deck, in which the pips
(hearts, clubs, diamonds and spades) in each card were incorporated into a picture. kind of hard to describe,
but here is the archived copy of the page on my old web site which describes them and has some examples:

http://web.archive.org/web/200702160410 ... m/deck.htm

If that doesn't load, here is a page on Transformation Playing Cards on Wiki:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transforma ... aying_card

Notice that some in some Transformation cards, the Pips are located and oriented where they are on a standard
deck. By "orientation", I mean whether the pip is rightside-up or upside-down. On a standard deck, the pips
above the center of the card are rightside-up. those below it are upside-down. Those directly on the center
(such as the center pip on a Five) are generally rightside-up.. designing/drawing the cards so that the objects
representing the pips are shaped, sized, located and oriented as they would be on a standard deck is quite a
challenge. There are some quite lovely transformation decks where the artist has taken liberties with these
things, such as the Keys to the Kingdom deck on the above iki page (the card where the clubs are the heads
of mice on the floor), but I wanted to create a "true" transformation deck, as the challenge of the proper location
and orientation intrigued me. .

But, again, my lack of drawing skills prevented me from creating such a deck.
From about 1993-1997 I worked as an independant computer programmer for Buena Vista Home Video, the video
division of Disney. It was a fun place to work, and hardly a month went by without them handing out some sales
giveaway trinket (buttons, coffe mugs, pens, etc) related to the latest film or video released by Disney or its
various film partners.

Every year around Christmas, they took us all to a movie theater and would show us trailers for (and clips from)
some of the films they would be releasing in the coming year.

In December of 1994, they showed us trailers for several films, but the only ones I recall were While You Were
Sleeping
and Toy Story. This was the original Toy Story, and was the first time I had seen that type of 3D
rendered Computer graphics on film.

The clip they showed us was from the opening sequence where Woody and the other toys were spying on the
children arriving for the birthday party. The makers of the film hadn't yet decided how to render the human
characters in a way that would make them very different from the toy characters, so the portions of the clip with
humans (such as the children arriving for the party) were still, charcoal drawings, used to show the scenes to
investors and such.

It was while watching this clip that it dawned on me: Every frame of this film was drawn not by hand, but by a
computer! And, since I programmed computers for a living, if I could find an affordable program which would run
on my IBM PC/XT which could create images like those in the film, perhaps my lack of drawing skills needn't
prevent me from creating a deck of cards!
I started doing web searches for 3D-Rendering (the technique used in Toy Story, and found a program called
POV-Ray which did 3D rendering on a PC! And was downloadable for free! I downloaded it at

http://www.povray.org/

Not only was it free, and would even run (though slowly) on my IBM XT, but it required even less in the way of
drawing abilities than I had hoped! It was essentially a programming/graphic language, in which you describe
objects in geometric terms, place them (and lights and the "camera" in a 3D space (using X, Y and Z
coordinates), then run that code through POV-Ray, which would then render it into a .bmp graphic! I COULD DO
THIS!!

I dove into learning the language, and used it to create some (very) simple images. And I mean SIMPLE.
Ray-tracing, the method used by POV-Ray, is very math-intensive, so running it on an XT was.....slow. As in, it
would take hours (literally) to render sample images which should have rendered in less than one minute.

One of the first ideas I had for a transformation card rendered for more than 24 hours straight before stopping it,
incomplete. So I ended up shelving the project until I could upgrade my computer to something with more
processing power.

I upgraded the processor a time or two, but it wasn't until 1998 that I bought something with enough power to
really render complex POV-Ray scenes in an acceptable time frame. I came up with interesting ideas for various
cards, and was pleased at some of the results. I shared images of some of the cards with some of my fellow
playing card collectors, printing some out and taking them to the annual convention of 52 Plus Joker (52+J),, a
collector organization I belonged to. They were well-received, People seemed to love them, and they urged me to
finish the deck and seek a publisher for it. A publisher was there, who said that he loved the cards, but was not
sure he could sell enough of such a deck to make a profit on it.
In 1999 I received an unrelated letter from the International Playing Card Society (the IPCS). another collector

organization. They were going to publish a deck in 2000 to commemorate the past hundred years of playing card
history, and were sending a letter to 56 members asking for their help. The idea was to assign each of those
members ONE card from the deck (52 cards plus four jokers). eacf of us was to find a card olf that suit and
denomination from our collection, and send it (or a high-resolution scan of it) to the man who was organizing it.
To ensure a variety of cards were included, members from a wide variety were selected, and each of us were
instructed to choose our assigned card from a deck published in our country. To further insure a variety, some
of us were asked to choose a card published in the first half of the 20th century, the others, one from the
second half of the century. I was assigned tha Five of Clubs. So I had to find a Five of Clubs from a deck
published in the United States sometime between 1950 and 1999. I looked through the more than 1,000 decks in
my collection, looking for any Five of Clubs I thought worthy of inclusion in the project. The focus of my
collection was (and is) decks with "non-standard courts" (unusual Jacks, Queens and Kings), so the majority of
decks in it have a plain, ordinary Five of Clubs. None of the non-standard Fives of Clubs I found (such as those
within transformation decks) really "grabbed" me.. I looked through my designs for my transformation deck. Since
it was unpublished, it didn't meet the two main criteria (a deck published in the USA, a deck published between
1950 and 1999) Plus, I was only about a third of the way into the project, and had not created a Five of Clubs
yet!

But I HAD created a SIX of Clubs, and, with a bit of tweaking, I could make it a Five. I wrote to the man who
was in charge of the project and asked if a card from an as-yet-unpublished deck would be acceptable. He
replied that he felt it was a great idea, and thought that, although the deck was a celebration of cards from the
century that was coming to a close, including a card from an as-yet-unpublished deck woulg be a sort of nod to
decks to be published in the upcoming century. So I tweaked my Six of Clubs and made it a Five (actually, I think
it worked BETTER as the Five! I sent it off to the man in charge of the project, and he loved it. He asked what the
name of the deck was going to be, and I, ever the optimist, said that it would be published the next year as
Transformation 2000
.

Later in 2000, the IPCS deck celebrating the past 100 Years was published, and copies were given out to attendees at
the 2000 joint convention of 52+J and the IPCS in New Haven, CT. The deck came in a box with a small book.

The book had a two-page spread for each card in the deck. the left page had a picture of the card, the right side
had a write-up about the card, the deck it came from, and the collecfor whose collection it was from.

The deck itself was slightly oversized, with the image of the collector;s card centered in it. It was quite a feeling,
after several years of collecting cards, and working for months on my own design, it was quite a feeling to
actually hold in my hand a professionally-published playing card of my own design! Later, at that same
convention, the keynote speaker was a man who was the curator for the Fournier P)laying Card Museum in
Vittoria, Spain. He announced during his speech that the "celebration of 100 Years" deck was going to be on
permanent display at the museum!

So, one little piece of my "art" is evidently on display in a museum! Perhaps some day I will go see it.

My transformation deck was never published. In fact, I never completed it. Not long after the IPCS "100-year deck"
was published, my then-wife Cindy announced that she wanted a divorce, and I couldn't talk her out of it. The
following year before she filed the papers and moved out, was horrific, and drained me of all creative juices. My
transformation deck was one of many projects, such as my playing card web site, that all fell by the wayside
due to the toll the divorce took on me.

Writing all this up has renewed my interest in complete the deck, but All of my files for the project - the POV-Ray
source code AND the rendered images - are on a computer drive to which I currently do not have access.
starting the project over from scratch at this point is just...unthinkable. I have two copies of the "hundred year"
deck around here somewhere. If I find it, I will scan the Five of Clubs and post it in this thread.
I'm quite proud of it, but it really isn't worth all of the build-up I've ended up giving it here.
-RSL
After I posted that, I added the following over time:
RSLancastr wrote:Good News!

I was chatting on FB with my friend Gina Pace last night.

Gina and I met online back in the 1990s, when I had my web site
about my playing card collection, and she had a web site about
her tarot card collection. We became good friends through our
related hobbies. When I was working on my Transformation
deck. I had emailed her images of some of the cards.

So, last night on FB I asked her if she remembered the deck,
and she said that she still had some of the images! I asked her
to email them to me, and she did! Few of them were at or near
completion, and most are fairly small, so I could email them to
her. I hesitate to share them here, after all the build-up I've given
them, but...what the heck. I will upload a few of them over the
next few posts.

Enjoy!

I believe I said earlier that I had modified my deck's Four of Clubs to create the Five of Clubs for the IPCS "Hundred Years" deck. But that didn't seem quite right to me though. Because if I'd had an idea which would have worked as well for a Five as for a Four, I would probably have used it for the Five,
since, as Ihave mentioned, the more pips there are on a card, the harder it is to come up with a workable idea for transforming it.

When my Tarot Card collecting friend Gina sent me these images the other night, I found out that I was correct. It wasn't the Four of Clubs I reworked into the Five, it was the Six of Clubs!

The idea for using a three-bladed fan as a Club pip in a transformation card had probably been done before. But I had decided at the beginning of the project that I would not look at old transformation decks while I was creating my own deck, so I wouldn't be tempted to steal any ideas.

Actually, one thought I had early on was to create a transformation deck with the cards being 3D Photorealistic recreations of cards from transformation decks throughout the history of transformation cards. It would have been fun, and a challenge, but I'm glad I dropped that idea in favor of creating an all-original transformation deck.

Back to fans as clubs, though...

Although, when I first got the idea of a fan as a club, I assumed it was not a new idea, I at first had no idea how I would use upside-down fans for the upside-down clubs (take a look at the clubs cards in a deck. the clubs in the bottom half of the card are mostly upside-down).

First, I had to decide how to have multiple fans in a scene. I could easily create an Ace of Clubs with one fan, but again, the more pips I could create with an idea, the better.

Where are there multiple fans together? In a display of fans in a store!

But why would half of them be upside-down? When I came up with a workable answer to that, I created my deck's Six of Clubs, which I will post after this.

TRANSFORMATION 2000
- Six of Clubs -

http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/C6_zps81e8ab32.jpg
RSLancastr wrote: Boxes for the fans could be upside-down!

I modeled the fan from a fan in my home office (where I did much of my POV-Ray coding). I made up the "KOOL-AIR" brand name to avoid trademark problems. I added the blowing ribbons to give the image some depth. I had hoped to have the near end of one of the ribbons coming close enough to the "camera" that it would be obscuring a bit of the white "frame" of the card. I wanted a few of the cards to have objects which "broke the fourth wall" this way, but I don't think any of them worked out.
RSLancastr wrote:So, when I needed to come up with a Five of Clubs for the IPCS "100 Years" deck, I removed one of the center row of fans and moved the other into the middle of the shelf.

Last night I was able to contact the gentleman who was in charge of that project, and he will try to send me either the image of my transformed Five of Clubs which I sent him back then (MUCH larger than these, to allow for printing without pixellization (jaggies). If he can't find that, he will scan in the Five of Clubs from the IPCS deck (with my card in it). I will post in this thread whichever of those he sends.
TRANSFORMATION 2000
- FIVE of Diamonds (Detail/Element) -

http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/chessset_zps3ab9e663.png
RSLancastr wrote: I designedand created each of the objects shown in each card.

There were times when I would generate a close-up "test view" of an object before reducing it in size to be used in a card.

This image of a chess set is one such "test view" from my deck's Five of Diamonds.

The scene was of a display window in a game store. There were four small round tables in the display, with a different square-shaped game on each (I believe that the games were Scrabble, Quarto, Checkers and Chess).

The "camera" viewed the window from slightly above the tabletps' level, and the game boards were all turned at an angle so that, from the "camera's" point of view, they (the game boards formed the diamonds in the four corners of the card (the scene required the card to be viewed on its side).

The Fifth (center) diamond was formed by lettering on the window, where a "W" sat above an "M", forming the diamond.

I modeled the chess set after a set my brother had bought for me one Christmas when he was stationed with the US Air Force in Ankara, Turkey.

The pieces in THAT set were made of bronze and copper, but I rendered them as gold and silver in the scene, to give the pieces a shiny, reflective surface.

There was an "in joke" incorporated into the Scrabble game, way too small to be seen, but I knew it was there:

One of the words spelled out with tiles on the board was RO_ASTER, with the "_" being a blank tile.

If you pronounce the blank tile as "blank", the played word is "RO(BLANK)ASTER". :D :D :D

I don't have the image of the completed card, but had this "test view" of the chess set from it, and decided to show it here.
TRANSFORMATION 2000
- TWO of Diamonds -

http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/D2_zps3f70dfb9.jpg
RSLancastr wrote: (See the description under the enlarged view below)
TRANSFORMATION 2000
- TWO of Diamonds (Enlarged) -

http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/D2a_zpsf1bff6f8.jpg
RSLancastr wrote: I really enjoyed creating this one, because almost everything in it
is modeled after an actual item in my home at the time I was
designing the deck.

1) The bookcase was an actual Ikea bookcase in my living room.
Every book in the case is one from my collection. I chose
(mostly) series of books, to simplify recreating them, and to
keep books on a shelf a uniform height.
Every knick-knack was one we owned.

==== 1.1) On the first/top shelf:
========The two groups of books at left are a series of Agatha
========Christie paperbacks.
========The group on the right is a series of Edgar Rice
========Burroughs' Tarzan paperbacks.
====1.2) On the second shelf:
========The books on the left are a series of Stephen King
========paperbacks
========The books on the right, I'm not sure.
====1.3) On the third shelf:
========Most of the books on the left are my reference books
========for my playing card collecting. They didn't all share a
========format, but I thought that putting them all on a playing
========card was appropriate.
========The red book was a Webster's ========Dictionary -
========not sure why I included it.
========The three black books to the right of the dictionary
========were reference books on POV-Ray. I thought
========including them in this project was appropriate as well.
========The tryptych of photos on the right were school
photos of our three children (Rosamund, Genevieve and
Nathaniel) - (17, 16 and 14 years old at the time)
====1.4) On the fouth shelf
========Photo Albums. We only had two or three of each of
the four colors, but I cheated and filled the shelf with them. I had
intended to make a third diamond here out of the gold starbursts
on the spines, but it didn't look right.
====1.5) On the fifth shelf
======== The wooden toy/puzzle on the left was a gift to me
========from my Beeg Seestor when I was in high school. It
========consisted of six wooden blocks with geometric
========shapes on all six faces. The object was to slide the
========blocks into the frame so that all six geometric shapes
========can be seen on all four sides of the puzzle.
======== The green thing on red wheels was a wooden
========alligator pull-toy I had bought my first wife (more of
========that "country" decor she loved).
====1.6) On the sixth shelf:
======== The colorful books on the left are a collection of
========Stephen R. Donaldson paperbacks. The first
========three are the first Thomas Covenant Trilogy.
======== The white books on the right are a series of Edgar
======== Rice Burroughs paperbacks
====1.7) On the seventh shelf
======== On the left is a series of Larry Niven paperbacks
========(Tales of Known Space)
======== On the right are paperbacks of Rex Stout's
========Nero Wolfe books

==== 2) The desk
========(you can only see the end of it on the left)
========was a huge (six-foot long at least) antique roll-top
========desk my first wife and I bought for $1,000 in an
========immense antique place. I modeled the entire desk
========to see how life-like I could make it, but I couldn't
========come up with a design for a card which used the
========whole desk, so it ended up only making a partial
========appearance here.
========
========When I showed my then-wfe (whose desk it was) the
========graphic with the full desk in it, she asked "Why did you
========take a photo of my desk?" Which showed me I had
========modelled it pretty well.

====3) The tall, blue birdhouse on the right was an actual
wooden birdhouse in our living room, a present for my first wife,
who loved wooden "country" decorations like that.

4) The floor was a pretty accurate rendition of the floor in our

living room, on which that bookcase, desk and birdhouse sat.
TRANSFORMATION 2000
- THREE of Clubs -

http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/gina03_3C_zps99ff224b.png
RSLancastr wrote: Here are
some lines
about this card
TRANSFORMATION 2000
- EIGHT of Diamonds -

http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/Gina05_D8_zps198b5cdb.png
RSLancastr wrote: My Eight of Diamonds was quite a project
... and is not near completion here.

Each of the paintings in the gallery is actually a separate POV-Ray Scene which I designed and rendered into its own graphic file, which was applied to a "canvas" object I used within this scene. Each is also an homage to a different artist. The one at upperleft, with the red object against a sky, is a nod to an Escher painting. The one at top center is based on some of the red/blue/yellow/gray/black works of Piet Mondrian. The one on the upper right, of the bricks, is based on a work of an artist whose name escapes me at the moment.The two at bottom are based on Dali's famous work Time or whatever it was called, with the melting watch with the ants crawling on it (even the ants are there - trust me). There are two of them because I ran out of ideas. One of those "diamonds" was going to be either a wide, vase-like sculpture or a diamond-shaped piece of a complicated mobile hanging closer to the viewer. I had hoped to include patrons standing around, but never got to it.

Notice too that each of the paintings has small lights focused on it.
TRANSFORMATION 2000
- SIX of Diamonds -

http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/D6_zpsb144446b.png
RSLancastr wrote: An early six of diamonds.

This card was a nod, of sorts, to MLYAHT, my computerized Yahtzee game.

"Yacht" is on the scorecard because that was the original name of Yahtzee,
and, I hoped, would avoid any copyright/trademark problems with having what looked like an actual Yahtzee scorecard on this card. I had named the computerized game YAHT rather than YAHTZEE for similar reasons. (The "ML" was short for MicroLink, the name of the PC User Group of which I was a member, and I used "YAHT" instead of "YACHT" because I had misremembered
the original board game's name.

In later versions of this card, the open end of the dice cup can be seen, and there are blurry "trails" to the five dice, making it appear that they are in motion, being rolled, rather than just frozen in time.

By the way, The "fishy" Ten of Spades above also illustrates a problem I belive I mentioned earlier - the more pips on the card, the more difficult it is to create a transformation of the card which doesn't look too staged/posed/contrived. I think the problem is even more pronounced in photorealistic images than they are in drawn/painted ones. Finding and photographing ten fish in precisely that formation would be fairly impossible. And, one problem when creating photorealistic computer images in general: If the image is too "perfect", it looks obviously phony. people will often intentionally add "imperfections" (dust or dirt on an object, scratches on a wooden table or floor, etc) which will, almost subliminally, fool the eye into accepting the image as an actual photograph.

I was not experienced enough with POV-Ray to have such techniques in my bag of tricks yet, but planned to add those kinds of touches at the end.
TRANSFORMATION 2000
- TWO of Spades -

http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/S2_zps04fab111.png
RSLancastr wrote: Here are
some lines
about this card
TRANSFORMATION 2000
- TEN of Spades -

http://i1322.photobucket.com/albums/u570/RSLancastr/ST_zpsd11d7aaa.png
RSLancastr wrote: Not a terribly original idea, as fish have been used as spades in many transformation decks over the years. I thought that it would look cool in photorealistic 3D.
Again, this was my first pass at it. I had intended to add a kelp forest behind the fish, and bubbles coming up from the seabed, and other, smaller fish closer to the "camera" to give the image more depth, but never got around to adding that detail. IIRC, this was the last card I created for the project, and didn't spend much time on it, thus the unfinished result.
-Marcel Marceau
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Re: UC Featured Collector for March/April - Robert Lancaster

Unread post by RSLancastr »

Sorry that previous post is so funky. That mostly comes from cut/pasting something from one forum into Notepad, editing that, then cut/pasting it from Notepad to another forum.
-Marcel Marceau
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