I remember when these came to KS. They're a nice-enough design, but promotion is becoming more and more vital to a deck's success these days, due to the huge amount of competition. If you don't let people know you're out there, they won't know and can't possibly care.
I'd bump up the production values on the tuck box a bit - it's a key factor for some deck designs and will be more likely to catch the eye of both collectors and perhaps even people into high design. Get a few design blogs to write about your deck and yours could become the next Misc. Goods deck - it's how they made a name for themselves. Collectors initially gave a near-universal shrug when the deck came out - it had some design flaws from a playing card perspective. But a few design blogs wrote favorably about it and to someone into high design, the then-high cost of $15 a pack was a pittance compared to what they might normally spend on home furnishings. Collectors didn't start taking notice until the goal got shattered and the deck's creator tweaked the design a bit to make it more playable/functional. It was the first playing card project to crack the six-figure mark in US dollars raised.