How to Make Your Own Tarot or Oracle Deck: Personal Divination Tool Creation
Create Cards That Speak Your Language
Tarot and oracle decks are deeply personal divination tools. While there are hundreds of beautiful published decks available, there's something uniquely powerful about creating your own. When you make your own deck, you're not just creating a divination tool—you're creating a language of symbols that speaks directly to your subconscious, a set of images that resonate with your personal understanding, a tool that's perfectly attuned to your intuition. Every card you create deepens your understanding of its meaning. Every image you choose or draw becomes embedded in your psyche. The deck becomes an extension of you.
Creating your own deck is also a profound spiritual practice. As you research meanings, choose symbols, and create images, you're engaging deeply with the archetypes, energies, and wisdom that the cards represent. You're not just learning about the Fool or the High Priestess—you're channeling them, embodying them, giving them form through your creativity. The process of creation is itself transformative, and the finished deck becomes a powerful tool that carries all the energy and intention you've poured into it.
This tutorial will teach you how to create your own tarot or oracle deck, from concept to finished cards, whether you're an artist or not.
Tarot vs. Oracle Decks
Tarot Deck
Structure:
- 78 cards total
- 22 Major Arcana (archetypal journey)
- 56 Minor Arcana (4 suits of 14 cards each)
- Established meanings and symbolism
- Complex system
Pros:
- Rich, established tradition
- Deep symbolic system
- Widely recognized
Cons:
- 78 cards is a lot to create
- Requires understanding of traditional meanings
- More time-intensive
Oracle Deck
Structure:
- Any number of cards (typically 30-50)
- No required structure
- You create the meanings
- Completely customizable
Pros:
- Complete creative freedom
- Easier to create (fewer cards)
- Can be themed to your interests
- No "wrong" way to do it
Cons:
- No established tradition to lean on
- Must create entire system yourself
Materials & Supplies
Card Base
- Blank playing cards - $10-25
- Heavy cardstock - $8-20
- Pre-cut card blanks - $15-40
- Standard size: 2.75 x 4.75 inches (tarot)
- Or custom size
Art Supplies (Choose Based on Method)
For hand-drawing/painting:
- Markers, colored pencils, or paints - $15-50
- Fine-tip pens for details - $8-20
- Pencils for sketching - $5-15
For collage:
- Magazines, printed images - $5-20
- Glue stick or mod podge - $5-10
- Scissors - $5-10
For digital:
- Design software (Canva, Photoshop, etc.) - Free-$20/month
- Printer or printing service - $50-200 or $30-100 for service
Protection & Finishing
- Clear sealant spray - $8-15
- Or laminating sheets - $10-25
- Card sleeves (optional) - $5-15
Storage
- Decorative box or bag - $10-30
- Fabric for wrapping - $5-15
Planning Your Deck
Choosing Deck Type
For beginners: Oracle deck (30-40 cards)
For tarot lovers: Full 78-card tarot
For specific purpose: Themed oracle deck
Deciding on Theme
- Traditional tarot symbolism
- Nature-based (animals, plants, seasons)
- Goddess or deity focused
- Chakra or energy-based
- Affirmation or guidance cards
- Personal symbols and experiences
- Cultural or mythological
Creating Card List
For oracle deck:
- Brainstorm themes or messages
- Aim for 30-50 cards
- Ensure variety (positive, challenging, neutral)
- Create balanced spread of energies
For tarot deck:
- Research traditional tarot structure
- Decide if following traditional meanings or creating new interpretations
- Plan imagery for all 78 cards
Method 1: Simple Oracle Deck with Collage (Easiest)
Difficulty: Beginner | Time: 10-20 hours total | Cost: $30-80
No artistic skill required—use found images.
Instructions:
- Create card list: 30-40 cards with themes/messages
- Gather images:
- Cut from magazines
- Print from internet (royalty-free images)
- Use your own photos
- One image per card
- Prepare card bases:
- Cut cardstock to size
- Or use blank cards
- Create each card:
- Glue image to card
- Add title/keyword at bottom
- Optional: Add border or decorative elements
- Seal cards:
- Spray with clear sealant
- Or laminate
- Let dry completely
- Create backs:
- Design one image for all card backs
- Or leave blank
- Write guidebook (optional but helpful):
- Meaning for each card
- How to use deck
- Consecrate deck
Method 2: Hand-Drawn Oracle Deck (Intermediate)
Difficulty: Intermediate | Time: 20-40 hours | Cost: $40-100
Draw your own images—personal and unique.
Instructions:
- Create card list and sketch concepts
- Practice sketches on paper first
- Draw on card blanks:
- Pencil sketch first
- Ink or color
- Add title/keywords
- One card at a time
- Don't worry about artistic perfection:
- Simple symbols work
- Stick figures are fine
- It's about meaning, not art skill
- Seal and finish
- Create backs
- Write guidebook
- Consecrate
Method 3: Digital Design and Print (Advanced)
Difficulty: Intermediate-Advanced | Time: 30-60 hours | Cost: $60-200
Professional-looking deck using digital tools.
Instructions:
- Design cards digitally:
- Use Canva, Photoshop, or similar
- Standard card size template
- Design front and back
- High resolution (300 DPI)
- Create all cards digitally
- Print:
- Home printer on cardstock
- Or professional printing service
- Consider print-on-demand services
- Cut to size if needed
- Laminate or seal
- Write guidebook
- Consecrate
Method 4: Simplified Tarot Deck (Advanced)
Difficulty: Advanced | Time: 60-100+ hours | Cost: $80-200
Full 78-card tarot—ambitious but rewarding.
Instructions:
- Study traditional tarot:
- Understand Major and Minor Arcana
- Research symbolism
- Decide on your interpretation
- Plan imagery for all 78 cards
- Create cards using chosen method:
- Start with Major Arcana (22 cards)
- Then each suit (14 cards x 4 suits)
- Work in batches
- Maintain consistent style across deck
- Seal and finish
- Write comprehensive guidebook
- Consecrate
Card Design Tips
Visual Elements
- Keep it simple (especially for first deck)
- Use consistent color palette
- Include clear focal point
- Add title/keyword for easy identification
- Consider symbolism carefully
Backs Design
- Same design for all cards
- Symmetrical (so you can't tell orientation when face-down)
- Reflects deck's overall theme
- Can be simple pattern or elaborate design
Borders
- Optional but can unify deck
- Same border for all cards
- Or different borders for different card types
Writing Your Guidebook
What to Include
- Introduction to your deck
- How to use it
- Meaning for each card (upright and reversed if applicable)
- Sample spreads
- Your personal connection to the deck
Card Meanings
- Keep it concise (1-2 paragraphs per card)
- Include keywords
- Explain symbolism in your imagery
- Add personal insights
- Include questions the card might ask
Consecrating Your Deck
- Cleanse all cards: Pass through smoke
- Charge deck: Place in moonlight overnight
- Hold deck and state intention:
- "I consecrate this deck as a tool for divination and guidance."
- "May it speak truth and provide clarity."
- Shuffle while connecting with deck
- Pull first card: Message from deck to you
- Sleep with deck under pillow (first night)
- Use regularly to build connection
Using Your Deck
Breaking In Your Deck
- Do daily draws for first month
- Journal about each card
- Notice patterns and insights
- Let meanings deepen over time
Caring for Your Deck
- Store in special box or bag
- Keep wrapped in silk or cloth
- Cleanse regularly (smoke or moonlight)
- Don't let others handle without permission
- Treat with respect
The Deck as Mirror
When you create your own divination deck, you're creating a mirror—a reflection of your understanding, your wisdom, your connection to the divine. Every card you create asks you: what does this archetype mean to me? How do I understand this energy? What symbols speak to my soul? The answers you discover become embedded in the cards, making them uniquely attuned to your intuition.
Using a deck you've created is different from using a published deck. These cards speak your language because you created that language. The symbols resonate because you chose them. The meanings are clear because you defined them. When you pull a card from your own deck, you're not just receiving a message—you're receiving a message from yourself, from your higher wisdom, in a language you created specifically for this purpose.
Your deck is your mirror, your teacher, your guide—and you created it all.
Create Your Personal Divination Tool
You now have everything you need to create your own tarot or oracle deck.
Start with an oracle deck if you're new to this—30 cards on themes that matter to you. Use collage if you're not confident in your art skills. Take your time, create with intention, and let each card teach you as you make it. When you pull your first reading from your finished deck, you'll feel the power of divination with a tool that's completely, uniquely yours.
Your deck awaits creation. Let's make some personal divination magic.
May your cards speak truth, your deck serve you well, and your divination be clear. Happy creating! 🃏✨