The Linestrider Tarot - minimalism and white space as strength
Some tarot cards are crammed with symbols. These cards breathe. The Linestrider Tarot by Siolo Thompson works with line drawings, sparse colour and plenty of white.
Thompson draws with fine black lines and adds watercolour here and there. Not large blocks, but accents. An orange coat, a blue dress, a green branch. The rest stays white.
The result is a deck that leaves room. Literal space on the card, and figurative space for interpretation. No excess of details competing for attention.
What you see on the cards
Thompson weaves together people, animals and plants. A figure has fox paws. A woman wears antlers. A deer looks at you with human eyes.
That blending suits the theme of the deck: the border between worlds. Between human and nature, between consciousness and the unconscious, between waking and dreaming.
The drawing style is elegant but not polished. You see the hand of the maker. Lines continue, some thicker than others. It has something sketch-like without being unfinished.
How the guidebook works
Each card comes with an interpretation and a series of questions. Those questions are not rhetorical. They are meant to work with.
For example, The Hermit asks: 'What do you need to retreat from?' or 'What wisdom are you seeking?' Concrete starting points for reflection.
The interpretations are clear and accessible. Thompson explains what a card can mean without being rigid. There is room to add your own associations.
In a reading, pay attention to what is not drawn. The white space around the figures works as breathing room for your interpretation.
About Siolo Thompson
Siolo Thompson is self-taught and works from Seattle. Her style combines natural elements with a psychological approach to tarot.
She also created The Linestrider's Journey oracle, which builds on the same visual language. Her work is characterized by that balance between lightness and depth.
Specifications
- Number of cards: 78
- Card size: 70 x 120 mm
- Finish: Matte cardstock with rounded corners
- Language: English (cards and guidebook)
- Guidebook: Comprehensive booklet with interpretations and reflection questions
- Publisher: Llewellyn Publications
- Artist and author: Siolo Thompson
- Packaging: Sturdy box
Questions we often get
Is this deck based on Rider-Waite-Smith?
Yes, the structure and much of the symbolism connect to RWS. The visual language is more modern and minimalist, but the familiarity is there.
How detailed is the guidebook?
Each card gets its own section with interpretation, upright and reversed meanings, and reflection questions. The text is accessible without being superficial.