Thank you all for the recognition and support! It is a lofty finding goal but the bulk of it is to be split between the artist and production. I am continuing to do research and have since learned that bicycle could do a 2500 deck run, so if funding is close that could also be a route. I knew a card manufacturer so it was natural to start there.
fyi: The Bubbie is mine!
Thanks for stopping by - we welcome designers and Kickstarter project creators.
I do seriously think the funding goal might trip this project up. Novelty decks don't usually get the same "love and attention" on Kickstarter other decks do, with few exceptions. I can think of two that succeeded - the Typestache deck, because it had a super-low goal, and Play Me Burlesque, because it had photos of burlesque dancers in costume! Tacoma Artists, not really a novelty deck, worked because it was locally-focused and had tremendous local support. Portland Places, another location-focused deck, succeeded because it had the lowest goal I've ever seen for a deck project - only $500!
The novelty-deck failures:
Valor deck - twice!
Warrior
2012 Origins
Triple-Topper - three times!
Deck the 1%: #OccupyWallStreet
Freakies
Metagalactic "Blackout" (glow in the dark!)
Internet Meme
Meme Playing Cards (different deck, similar theme)
Once Upon a Time... the Creepy Doll deck
Out of this World Space Age (technically not dead, but on life support with slim-to-none odds)
Roman Poker
Hero Decks
Antarctica Photo Shoot (this was real cute - looks like the creator made the deck as a way to fund a trip to Antarctica!)
SIDIGI: African Heritage
Redesigned Socially Positive Playing Cards (doesn't that just roll off the tongue?
)
Hipster
R@n$0m
Many of these decks had smaller goals than yours.
Now, having said all that...it doesn't mean bupkiss!
The majority of decks on Kickstarter are aimed at magicians, card flourishers and collectors, with a growing minority of poker players. That market segment is barely more than a rounding error in the grand scheme of things as far as playing card sales are concerned. What you need to do, BIG TIME, is push this deck in corners of the cards-buying world that it would most appeal to. You're welcome to discuss your deck here as much as you like - I encourage it! - but you'll find most people are somewhat less interested. Any websites appealing to popular Jewish culture would be a natural, as well as sites focusing on the intricacies and oddities of New York living - Yiddish still has its charms here! Israeli-oriented English-language sites also sound like a ripe target.
I'll say this much about the deck design - it's pretty solid. There doesn't seem to be too many "rookie mistakes" in how you have it organized and laid out. The only thing I'd fuss about at all is the one-way back - but that would apply if this was a serious deck for magic or poker, which it isn't.
I wish you the best of luck. If you need someone to spring ideas off of, feel free to pop in again. And you're more than welcome to participate in our other forums - some aren't even directly playing-card related!