LightWeb Oracle Deck - 44 cards with cosmic imagery and an extensive philosophical framework
Not every oracle deck works with loose meanings. The LightWeb Oracle is built around its own story, the Codex of Light. Each card has a place within that story, and the 140-page guidebook explains how everything connects.
The deck contains 44 cards with imagery full of light, colour and abstract forms. No scenes, no figures, but shimmering structures, constellations and energy patterns. The themes revolve around connectedness, self-inquiry and the question of what you are here to do.
What you see on the cards
The illustrations are digital and full of movement. Light radiates from the centre, shapes overlap, colours bleed into one another. The style recalls cosmic photography combined with abstract art.
There are no traditional symbols on the cards. You see geometric patterns, beams of light, spirals and forms that suggest stars or planets. Colours range from deep purple and blue to gold, pink and white.
How the guidebook works
The guidebook is the centre of gravity for this deck. Each card receives multiple pages of explanation, context within the Codex of Light, and questions to reflect on. The texts are contemplative and go deeper than brief meanings.
Joanna Hunter writes about concepts such as quantum field, galactic origin and soul missions. She explains these terms, but the texts do ask that you want to engage with them. This is not a set you move through quickly. The guidebook invites slow reading.
Draw one card per week and read the full text in the guidebook. Let the questions sit for a few days before you answer them. That suits the pace of this deck better than a card a day.
Who this works for
This deck is built for people who want to take time. The guidebook is too extensive for a quick daily draw. If you prefer to read a message quickly, this is not the right deck.
The language is spiritual and philosophical. Those who recognise terms such as consciousness expansion, energy work or cosmic connection will feel at home quickly. Those unfamiliar with these ideas must be willing to engage with them.
About the creators
Joanna Hunter developed the LightWeb and the accompanying 333Magic framework. She works as a spiritual teacher and started at the age of twenty-three. Her texts form the core of this deck.
Stephanie Wicker-Campbell lives in Sydney and draws from her interest in travel and spirituality. Anna Babich is a professional designer from Bulgaria who specialises in celestial and fae imagery. Together they created the 44 cards.
Specifications
- Number of cards: 44
- Language: English
- Guidebook: 140 pages, full colour
- Author: Joanna Hunter
- Illustrations: Stephanie Wicker-Campbell and Anna Babich
- Publisher: Muse Oracle Press
- ISBN: 9781763586925
- Weight: 366 g
- Dimensions: 105 x 35 x 143 mm
Questions we often get
Is this deck suitable if you are not familiar with terms such as quantum field or galactic origin?
The guidebook explains these concepts, but you do need to be willing to engage with them. The texts assume that you are open to this way of thinking. Without that willingness, the language will continue to feel abstract.
What distinguishes this deck from other oracle cards with cosmic imagery?
The LightWeb Oracle works with a coherent system, the Codex of Light. Each card has a fixed place within that story. That makes the deck more philosophical and less intuitive than sets where you mainly go by the image.