Well, I've got to say it: I'm really fond of this kind of drawing and I think it would make a sweet deck.
Unfortunately, as some folks noticed before me, bad timing for a KS launch. Not to mention the eccentric pricing method.
I know this is the final version of the deck but, since it would hardly be funded this time, I've got some constructive criticism on the deck:
IMHO, main problem is mirroring. The way court cards were drawn prevent them from being properly mirrored. When I say properly mirrored, I mean they lack continuity from one side to another (as shown on the attached image).
(Please, disregard any language mistakes I may have made. I'm from Brazil and my english isn't great.)
Your English is fine; better than many of the posters around here, even ones for whom English is their native language!
The eccentric pricing has to do with the decks being drop-shipped from Brahma Playing Cards, Mumbai, India. It costs $X to ship one deck via DHL, then just a little more to ship an extra deck. It's also meant to encourage more decks sold - you can get a brick for only $5 a deck.
The timing is very, VERY bad. There's a huge number of decks in the market now, and the new restrictions in place from Kickstarter discouraging wholesale/retail buyers dramatically slash the amount of money available. The new regulations don't permit a deck project to sell more than a dozen decks at any given reward level.
Re the mirroring, he's actually using the style of the late 19th-century Rouen designs from France - they didn't mirror their cards, instead just painting half a card and rotating the same image 180 degrees to maintain symmetry of design. Remember, this entire deck was created with quill and ink, not a computer graphics suite - in other words, he's using 19th-century technology to create his designs. The amount of work required is phenomenal, far beyond what many people would even consider. Some deck designs could practically be banged out in a single afternoon - this is NOT one of them.
It's a shame that the funding for it is so low - I think it was below 20% when I looked.