The Cerulean Sequence - numerology becomes image
Most numerology decks are supplementary. This one stands on its own. The Cerulean Sequence by James R. Eads gives each number its own face, atmosphere and symbolism. The result feels more like art than arithmetic.
The deck counts 60 cards and comes with a hardcover book that looks like a personal sketchbook. Pages full of sketches, riddles, notes and hidden messages. You leaf through it the way you would a journal, not the way you read a manual.
What you see on the cards
Eads draws in flowing lines, lots of blue and green, sometimes a flash of gold or red. His style is dreamlike but sharp. The cards feel playful, almost childlike in their curiosity, but there is depth underneath.
Each number receives multiple layers. No fixed meanings, no keyword lists. The images show how a number can behave as energy, as theme, as question.
How you work with it
This deck does not require prior knowledge of numerology. You can pull a card and see what the image evokes. Or you calculate your soul number and explore what that number means to you. The book helps, but does not force fixed paths.
Many people use this deck alongside their tarot cards. Pull a tarot card first, then a number. The number gives context, rhythm, timing.
Pull a card and let the number stay in your head for the rest of the day. Notice where it shows up: on the clock, in a house number, in a conversation.
About James R. Eads
James R. Eads is the creator of the Prisma Visions Tarot and works from a strong visual language. His style is fluid, hypnotic, full of movement. In The Cerulean Sequence he combines that visual language with the abstraction of numbers.
Specifications
- Number of cards: 60
- Guidebook: luxury hardcover book in sketchbook style
- Language: English
- Creator: James R. Eads
- Publisher: Prisma Visions
- Type: numerology oracle
Questions we often get
Is this a tarot deck?
No. This is an oracle focused on numerology. It counts 60 cards and does not follow a tarot structure. You can combine it with tarot, though.
Do I need to know numerology to use this?
Not necessarily. The book explains how to work with the numbers, but the cards can also be read intuitively without calculation. The images carry enough information.