-------------------------------------------------France circa 1890----------------
1. The first "folksy woodcut esoteric" French deck of the Marseille type is said to be the Epinal
http://www.aeclectic.net/tarot/cards/epinal/
2. Grand Etteilla versions from Editions Delarue would have been in Lille, France and Paris from Blocquel/Blismon/Lismon and his son in law MF Delarue:
But the Etteilla patterns would have been known as:
Grand Etteilla/En Livre du Thoth - 1840, 1890
Grand Oracle Jeu de Dames - 1865, 1870
Jeu des Princesses - 1845, 1870, 1890
Papus, Waite and Robert McBride (Occult Encyclopedia) bemoaned the popularity of the "Etteilla" tarot patterns and the Egyptianized tarots.
Now there was a scarcity of French/Italian pattern tarots in 1899-1910 in Great Britain when the British Golden Dawn members wanted decks, so they exported decks from France or Italy and the makers seem to have included:
Arnoult (French bought out be Grimaud)
Armino, whose doublesided designs sometimes copied Lamperti of Milan, son in law of Ferdinando di Gumppenberg and Dotti, both cardmakers of of Milan:
http://a.trionfi.eu/WWPCM/decks04/d03297/d03297.htm
Modiano of Triest, whose designs included Sibilla oracles, tarocks, a fancy doublesided majors/courts novelty tarot known now as Alan Tarot and the renamed Cagliostro--they were first issued around 1910
Alan Tarot/Tarock:
http://pasteboardmasquerade.com/Reviews/orell.html
"Cagliostro" circa 1912:
http://www.learntarot.com/cadesc.htm
I have to be honest, I believe those who were likely card readers would have had odd Etteilla and Egyptian patterns that even today are outside of the 'norm'. Here are some names to google:
Papus Tarot (Le Tarot Divinitoire) - 1909, 1910
Falconnier Wegner Egyptian Tarot -1896
Eudes Picard (robert mcbride Occult Encyclopedia).
If you want to just deal with 22 majors, than it would have been Oswald Wirth, but it seems mostly French--although it seems the use of reading only the major arcana was a practice advocated by him.
Good luck, that is a start.