Anyway, back to cards. The problem with getting deliveries of these cards is the packaging. It drives me up the wall. Each card is packaged in its own cellophane sleeve, and a batch of the same cards are then packed into another, slightly larger, cellophane sleeve. Both types have seals, which are basically sticky strips. I'm sure you know what I mean. New cards tend to be especially annoying, as the envelope is invariably inserted in a way that it covers whatever is written inside, and always at the far end of the sleeve. I then descend into a time of despair, as I try to see what's inside each one without breaking the sleeve or sticking an open sleeve to the card itself.
If it was a case of once this was done that was it, and the only time they had to be touched again was when someone bought some, I could probably cope. But the cards come with me to most of the Fairs I do, and have to be unpacked to go into the card spinner, and then returned to their packages at the end of the day. I gave up on that rather quickly, and got some grip-seal envelopes that fit most of them. It's still very fiddly, but at least I haven't got bags sticking to sleeves sticking to cards.
I tend to stick (no pun intended) to a few specific artists. My favourite is the fantasy artist Anne Stokes. Her art is so believable that it feels like it has been drawn from a live subject - hard to do when many of your subjects are dragons, unicorns, angels and faeries. Linda Ravenscroft is another. My favourite of hers is Emerald Heart, a faery card with definite Art Deco overtones. Then there's Briar, and his mainly mythological themes. Probably my favourite of all my cards are the dragon Yule cards, by Anne Stokes. I can't say what it would have meant to find a dragon in my stocking.
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