![]() ![]() No self-respecting programmer, UX practitioner, or web site designer should be without COLOR ORACLE REVIEW SOFTWAREIf you’d like to work with me one-on-one for a tarot reading, you can do that here.Hisham Abboud over at the Curious Chap blog promo’d Color Oracle, the software that the talented Bernhard Jenny programmed (with my sometimes helpful nagging) for simulating color blindness. If you’re drawn the concept and the imagery, you can buy a deck on Amazon. I hope you enjoyed this unboxing, flip through and review of A Yogic Path oracle deck. And if you’re into yoga, ayurveda, or want to learn more about the chakras, Indian deities, or Indian vedic philosophy, you will want to add this deck to your collection. If you’re new to Indian spirituality or even if you’re well versed in some of these concepts, this is an excellent deck to add to your collection. Overall, A Yogic Path is a beautifully designed deck with ancient philosophies presented in an easy-to-understand and easily accessible format. It’s a minor inconvenience, but there it is. COLOR ORACLE REVIEW DOWNLOADInstead, you have to go to the website and download the spreads from there. Given the structure of the deck, having some spreads included right of the box would have rounded out the offering. The one thing I did not like is that there are no spreads included in the guidebook. I also use these cards in my art practice, as a way to connect with one of the concepts and hold it loosely in my mind as I paint. I’ve used these cards both for daily readings and a weekly energy reading, and they work beautifully in both scenarios. If you wish to work more closely with your doshas, a quick google search will help you find the right foods for each dosha. Sahara Rose has done a very good job of distilling the essence of each concept in the short phrase, and reading both the upright and reversed meaning can help you understand the basics of the concept.įor example, the entry for Kapha, the earthy Dosha, helps you understand its balanced and unbalanced aspects - grounded, stable, and content when this dosha is balanced, and heavy or stuck when unbalanced. The illustrations by Danielle Noel, who has also illustrated the Work Your Light oracle deck and the Starseed Tarot, are absolutely gorgeous.īut even if you have had no exposure to Hinduism or Indian philosophy, it isn’t difficult to understand these concepts. The cards themselves are printed on sturdy cardstock with more of that beautiful gold printing on the card backs. What I found very thoughtful was the inclusion of a second table of contents with the cards listed alphabetically, which makes it very easy to jump to the right page in the guidebook. There’s no indication of the suits on the cards, but the full-color guidebook lists out all the cards by suit. The cards are divided into suits - Spirituality, Ayurveda, Chakras, Yoga, and Deities. If you’re short on space, you don’t need to hang on to the big white keepsake box, which in my books is a win. I really like the fact that the oracle cards come in their own little box. It has a magnetic clasp, and nestled within the box are the guidebook and the deck of cards. ![]() The white keepsake box with gold printing is encased in a gorgeous turquoise blue sleeve. The cardstock is nice and sturdy and I love all the gold embossing on the card backs, the box, and guidebook. A Yogic Path oracle deck: Flip through + first impressionsįirst off, this is a beautifully designed deck. This deck felt like a perfect way to dip my toe into these concepts. This also happened to be around the time that I was becoming more interested in learning a little more about my own ancestral traditions from a non-dogmatic, non-religious framework. I came across A Yogic Path oracle deck on Amazon quite by chance, and I was almost immediately intrigued by this deck of cards that fuses together concepts from Vedic spirituality with the philosophy of yoga, chakras, and deities. ![]()
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