This is probably half of my (entire!) collection. I realize you can't see much in these photos, but I plan to feature some of my better decks with individual posts in the future. If you see any decks you want more info on, let me know.
Those are some really nice decks. The Crooked Deck brings back a LOT of memories - I used to play with them as a kid! The Enardoe deck - that's a trick deck, right? I know the DeLand Automatic deck is!
If I'm not mistaken, the DeLand deck eventually became the intellectual property of S.S. Adams Novelties, and from there I think it went to Magic Makers or to USPC - there are some newer printings of that deck still around today with USPC deck seals on them. Most recent DeLand deck I've ever held in my hands was from 1990 but I've seen them for sale as new product within the last few years, and also in different DeLand designs. They all followed the same basic theme - a extreme version of a Gambler's Deck.
A Gambler's Deck is stripped, stacked and marked to allow you to know the top AND bottom cards of the deck (there are other markings, but they're secondary, like the mark that tells you if it's an Ace or the mark that tells you what color it is, etc.). The DeLand decks usually had markings that told you not just the top and bottom cards, but the location of ANY given card in the deck, when the deck was in stack order. Looking at the back of the top card, you could count down the exact number of cards needed to find any card desired.
There was a serious drawback with all that utility, however. It was not difficult at all to spot the changes from one card back to the next, there were so many of them. A DeLand deck of this type would ALWAYS fail a riffle test performed by anyone but the legally blind...in which case the chances were about fifty-fifty of failure!
Thanks for the trip down Memory Lane!
I Picked up these Empress Back 1905 Empire Playing cards by A. Dougherty last week.
Gorgeous. A deck like this was a crooked gambler's dream when they were first printed! The design is intricate enough to allow for a concealed marking system to be added after the fact by someone with the right shade of ink!