Symbolic Tarot of Wirth

Only 3 units left
Sale price$24.00 Regular price$24.95

The original Wirth Tarot was a deck of majors based on the Marseille Tarot, but with the addition of many more overt occult symbols.

The Symbolic Tarot of Wirth completes Wirth's original project with the addition of a carefully researched and compiled lower arcana that completes Wirth's occult system of Tetrads. This beautiful deck is a treasure for readers and collectors alike. It is printed in five colors, the fifth of which is a special golden hue that gives the cards a truly unique visual essence.

Authenticity You Can Trust

Authenticity You Can Trust

All of our products are genuine. No replicas, no knockoffs. We work with independent artists and publishers, so your purchase directly supports their creative art. As a small business, we handpick every item to ensure it's meaningful, beautifully made, and truly worth having.

Artist

Bruno Letizia and Mirko Negri

Cards

78

Size

2.59 x 4.72 inches

Guidebook

Included

Language

Multilingual

Bruno Letizia

Bruno Letizia is an Italian comic book artist and writer who attended the International School of Comics. He illustrated True Blood for IDW, iComics for Kawama, and Izuna for Humanoids. As a solo author, he created Heroin and published the short story "Fall of the Fortress" in CLiNT, a magazine made in the UK by Mark Millar. In 2012, he co-founded Villain Comics, an independent label, and since 2010, he has taught at the Intentional School of Comics.

Mirko Negri

Mirko Negri is an Italian tarot scholar, author, and illustrator known for completing Oswald Wirth’s tarot system by creating a full 78-card deck. He co-authored The Symbolic Tarot of Wirth, which expands Wirth’s original 22-card design by adding minor arcana grounded in esoteric symbolism.

Mirko has contributed astrological content to Grazia.it, Studio 1 TV, and magazines like Sirio, Astra, and Cartomanzia. His work reflects a deep commitment to preserving traditional occult teachings while making them accessible to modern readers.