The photo is indeed a POOR example - but you can't possibly get an accurate count of the number of cards in the blue stack from that image. You can't even see the entirety of the blue deck clearly because of the focus being set more for the red deck. There are areas of blur where you simply can't distinguish one card from another. Factor in that with the fact that the photo was taken at an angle and you really can't tell just what's X amount thicker or thinner with real accuracy..
Actually if you download the larger
original image, and zoom in using a photo editor, you can distinguish the cards quite clearly, Don, and count them accurately enough to get a pretty good estimate. I may be a few cards out at most, but my careful count of 56 vs 42 has to be pretty close to the truth.
I reached out to an Ellusionist representative for comment. He confirmed that the E7 deck is in reality 6 cards thinner than the B9 deck. In his words: "
The difference in thickness is 6 red Cohort cards. As in, if you put the two decks side by side, and remove 6 red Cohorts from that deck, they are the same height. Just tested that and it's absolutely true."
As for the picture in question, he didn't dispute my conclusion that in the marketing photo the E9 deck had around 56 cards and the E7 deck had only 42 cards and wasn't a complete deck. This was his response: "
Adverts sometimes exaggerate to make a point. Like, this may surprise you, but in the Bowflex ads? Those people looked like that already."
I like many Ellusionist products, including the much thinner stock of the E7 decks, but quite frankly I find this response very disappointing. Basically Ellusionist is telling us that we shouldn't expect them to be honest and reliable in their advertising, and effectively they're saying this: "
Don't trust what we show you in our advertising pictures, because we won't always tell you the truth." There's no indication in the accompanying ad copy that the product image is an exaggeration to make a point. It is clearly presented as giving an objective comparison between the thickness of the two decks, when in fact it turns out that one of the decks has more than a dozen cards missing! Ellusionist's product page doesn't even mention that the actual difference between the two decks is only a thickness of 6 cards, while the image makes it look like it's more than 20 cards different (courtesy of more than a dozen cards being missing from the E7 deck, and misleading use of arrows).
I find this deceptive and misleading, and this should make it harder for all of us to trust what Ellusionist says about their products - they seem quite happy to compromise the truth, if this example is any indication. In another forum, a person who works in advertising stated that exaggerating a visual representation like this is false advertising, and will get you sued and worse; he said further that if he ever did something what Ellusionist did with this promo image when doing an ad, he would get fired and blacklisted.