Forest of Enchantment Tarot - fairy-tale imagery packed with hidden detail
Some tarot cards you read. Some you get lost in. The Forest of Enchantment Tarot belongs to the second kind. The illustrations are dense enough that each draw reveals something new: a goblin among the roots, a cat on a windowsill, light filtering through a canopy you had not noticed before.
The deck is a collaboration between writer Lunaea Weatherstone and illustrator Meraylah Allwood, published by Llewellyn Publications. The visual language draws from European fairy-tale tradition: witches and wizards, faeries and elves, ghosts and shape-shifters, dancing princesses and weary old knights.
What you see on the cards
The illustrations are figurative and detailed. Every image is a complete scene, with a background, multiple characters, and symbolism that keeps rewarding attention. The colours are warm and saturated, with deep greens, gold, and rich blues throughout.
The cards are large in format and carry a glossy finish. That finish makes shuffling smooth, though the cards feel slicker in the hand than a matte surface would. The box closes with a magnetic lid and is built to last.
What the guidebook offers
The guidebook runs to 240 pages and shows every card in full colour. Each entry includes a description of the scene, the Oracle's Advice, and a Lorekeeper's Note, a voice that guides you through the forest as a character in its own right. That narrative quality sets the text apart from a standard card reference.
Weatherstone organises the symbolism of the deck around four reasons someone might enter a forest: a quest, fleeing from danger, seeking treasure, or being lost. Those four themes run through the way each card's meaning is constructed.
One deck, also as a standalone oracle
A companion Forest of Enchantment Oracle exists as a separate 40-card set. The two are designed to work together, sharing the same world, characters, and visual vocabulary. You do not need both, but if you use them side by side, familiar figures appear in each, such as the Gingerbread House, which appears in the oracle's Child of Boons.
When you first go through the cards, look past the central figure and into the background. Allwood has placed extra layers in every image that take several passes to notice.
About Lunaea Weatherstone and Meraylah Allwood
Lunaea Weatherstone is a writer who has worked in the tarot and oracle world for years. For this deck she built the entire narrative framework and meaning structure, grounded in the grammar of the European fairy tale.
Meraylah Allwood is an illustrator. Her style is figurative and layered, with a density of image that holds symbolism without becoming diagrammatic. The consistency of the world they built together is visible in every card.
Specifications
- Number of cards: 78
- Guidebook: 240 pages, with full-colour illustrations of all cards
- Language: English
- ISBN: 9780738751399
- Publisher: Llewellyn Publications
- Author: Lunaea Weatherstone
- Illustrator: Meraylah Allwood
- Card finish: glossy
- Card size: large
- Box: sturdy, magnetic closing lid
Questions we often get
Are there keywords or titles printed on the cards themselves?
No keywords or titles are printed on the cards. The meanings come from the guidebook and from reading the imagery directly. The guidebook is entirely in English.
How does this deck relate to the Forest of Enchantment Oracle?
The tarot cards follow the classic 78-card structure. The oracle is a separate 40-card set designed as a companion, set in the same world. They share characters and locations but each works independently.