Thank you Don this is really awesome! I definitely lile those ideas, I'm still not sure how to incorporate the pips just yet but im opem for some more references, i really planned this deck from outside to inside but always been a fan of fully customize decks, i want this to be for everyday use as in card collectors, magicians, players etc but i think changing the hearts and clubs for the other shapes that could work too. Also the cool thing about this deck is that i will come with custom matches and yhr box side has the friccion stripe so people can use it as a matchbox as well
A few things...
You will NEVER make a fully-custom deck that is for everyday use of such a wide variety of groups, for the same reasons you don't use a drill to hammer a nail or a hacksaw to unscrew a bolt. Different trades, different tools.
You will have a difficult time finding a manufacturer that will make you a custom tuck box that will also function as a matchbox - and when you do, the end result will be so phenomenally expensive, you'll never make any profit selling it - and you'll probably need a different company to supply the matches. Worse, you will be restricting your potential audience because some locales place restrictions against minors buying matches or other ignition devices - never mind trying to get a pack on a plane.
I'm in agreement with Justin - if you want the broadest audience possible, you can indeed use my custom pip idea for incorporating the two designs, but the indices - at least the "right-handed" indices - should be International Standard pips. That standard is not quite exactly the same as Parisian - the Parisian design is the same general shapes but a little different in the details. I.S. would be more accurately referred to as the "Anglo-Rouen" design, which originated in Rouen, France, south of Paris and on the coast, and was exported to and copied by the English, and eventually the Americans. The French considered the Rouen design inferior to the Parisian design, reserving Parisian for domestic decks while exporting the somewhat cruder Rouen - and just as what happened with Betamax tape, the more widely-distributed model overtook the "better" model to become the standard after some refinements were made over time.