Livia
Deck in hand, study cap on, typing fingers at the ready...a feat when you have a deck in your hand ... oh and favorite card(s) I think would be the queens but it is a tough call
this deck reminds me of when I lived in Italy. I lived in a town called Vicenza just outside Venice. It is not much of a tourist town but it is where SETAF is located (Southern Europe TAsk Force) the army is terrible with those, my brother was stationed there (he liked to call it Something Else The Army Forgot), Anyway at the time I was an Art History major in College and living it Italy I knew that I would see certain artwork like the David sculpture, or the Sistene Chapel, but there were peices I had never even thought of, and boom there they were in living color. This deck reminds me of those works, either a little more obscure, or I had just never paid attention to where they were located now, and they were all highlights of the trip...
Aren't they some kind of lap harp, a relative of the Mandolin or Palmstry (I think that is how you spell that) which is the predicesor to the harp
this deck reminds me of when I lived in Italy. I lived in a town called Vicenza just outside Venice. It is not much of a tourist town but it is where SETAF is located (Southern Europe TAsk Force) the army is terrible with those, my brother was stationed there (he liked to call it Something Else The Army Forgot), Anyway at the time I was an Art History major in College and living it Italy I knew that I would see certain artwork like the David sculpture, or the Sistene Chapel, but there were peices I had never even thought of, and boom there they were in living color. This deck reminds me of those works, either a little more obscure, or I had just never paid attention to where they were located now, and they were all highlights of the trip...
Emily said:Does anyone know the name of the musical intruments that are being playing by children on The Empress and Ten of Coins?
Aren't they some kind of lap harp, a relative of the Mandolin or Palmstry (I think that is how you spell that) which is the predicesor to the harp