Visconti Sforza Vintage Tarot Soap: Love Triad Set

$40.00

These are truly Magikal Soaps, as I have hand made each in ritual with intent. The Triad set comes with three bars of soap, a wooden heart sun catcher with crystals and a woven hemp bag. Each bar of soap represents one of the following from The Visconti-Sforza Tarot Cards, Italy, Milan ca. 1480–1500. One of the oldest decks still in existence.

Temperance:  Temperance is the Falling in love, Commitment, Choices, Being at a crossroads, Partnerships for bringing balance, patience and moderation into your life

The Fool: The Fool represents new beginnings, having faith in the future, believing in the universe.

The Lovers:  The Lovers represents Falling in love, Commitment, Choices,  Partnerships.

Perfect for meditations and bath rituals, focusing on relationships of romantic involvement.

The set comes beautifully wrapped as seen.

The Triad Handmade Artisan Tarot Soaps weigh over a pound and a half in total. Main Ingredients: Neem Oil, Glycerine Soap , Turmeric and  Rose Oil.

 

Description

Artisan Soap By Crystalline Harlot
Tarot Art By Antonio Cicognara

Temperance, The Lovers, The Fool

Visconti-Sforza Tarot Cards

Italy, Milan
ca. 1480–1500
173 x 87 mm
The Tarot is much more than mere pictures on cards, the pictures are physical symbols for spiritual concepts. The images are symbolic representation of archetypal forces and/or beings which have always existed and have been identified and passed on to us by ancient initiates and which provide a focus for us to use in self-initiation, spiritual development, and the perception of hidden wisdom.
Although tarot cards originated around 1425–50 in Milan or Ferrara, they were not generally used for fortune-telling until the 1780s. Fifteenth-century painted tarot cards are exceedingly rare, and no complete deck (seventy-eight cards) survives. The deck to which these cards belongs has been attributed to Bonifacio Bembo and his family. Bembo was the favorite painter of Bianca Maria Visconti (1425–1468), and it seems likely that the deck was made for her and her husband, Francesco Sforza (1401–1466), whose betrothal (1432) and marriage (1441) united the two families and whose emblems and devices are intermingled on several of the cards.
Partial Credits to: https://www.themorgan.org/collection/tarot-cards

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