French-Vietnamese author Lili Nguyen and artist Lucie Corbasson created the Venice Witch Oracle, a 33-card deck that turns the lagoon city’s secrets into a portable mirror. Each shuffle is an initial invitation to honour life, slow down time, and trust intuition. Reviewers praise the original design for its graceful representation of masked traditions and symbolic water imagery.
Although this article keeps the city’s name to a whisper, the floating city’s bridges, lions, and moonlit canals thread through every card. Their dialogue with colour helps readers recognise how the universe reflects inner tides, and why the deck focuses on simple, compassionate insights rather than complex interpretive layouts.
Critics celebrate Corbasson’s illustrations as a highly coloured representation of everyday life — proof that contemporary art can amplify age-old myths. Because the Oracle itself emerged from artisanal studios near the historic Arsenale of Venice, its imagery carries centuries of craft wisdom, reminding readers that personal clarity emerges through patience, rhythm, and reflective practice.
Because there are only 33 cards, each icon has room to breathe. The author suggests a one-card draw to explore temporal themes through a symbolic layout inspired by Venice’s flowing canals. The artist’s muted palette and gilded borders invite the reader to “simply take some time” with every image — an approach that keeps the heart receptive to subtle messages.
Whether you consult the Venice Witch Oracle, its sister Witch deck, or any modern deck, these tools prove that a single turn of the cards can clarify life, harmonise intuition, and let the flow of time feel purposeful. In their quiet way, they remind seekers that fortune is less about prediction than mindful presence.