UC Featured Collector for Mar/April 2014 - Robert Lancaster
Posted: Sun Feb 23, 2014 8:30 am
Everyone please welcome our inaugural Featured Collector and long-time contributor Robert S Lancaster.
He has taken the time to share a bit of his collection for everyone, and shown us how to get this area started!
My first attempt to do an "interview" was done by PM here, I posed questions from suggestions I got, and here's the results:
He has taken the time to share a bit of his collection for everyone, and shown us how to get this area started!
My first attempt to do an "interview" was done by PM here, I posed questions from suggestions I got, and here's the results:
Questions and Answers
- Q: When did you start collecting playing cards?
RSLancastr wrote: Well, that's kind of hard to pin down:
1968: I bought the first deck in what later became my collection (I was only ten years old).
1978: I bought the second deck, and started cruising antique stores for more.
1996: I got on the Internet and found the site "Auction web" (later renamed eBay) and my collecting really took off.
Back then, a search of eBay for the phrase "playing cards" would show maybe 200-400 listings, and I would look at them all each day.
Now, that same search shows tens of thousands of listings! - Q: How many decks are in your collection?
RSLancastr wrote: I haven't actually counted them in years, but more than 2,000 - probably more than 2,500.
- Q: What types of decks do you collect?
RSLancastr wrote: My primary focus is decks with custom courts, but also Transformation decks, Christmas-themed decks, Science Fiction-themed decks and branded Bicycle decks.
- Q: What is the oldest deck in your collection?
RSLancastr wrote: I have a couple of decks from the 1880s.
- Q: What is your favorite deck in your collection and why?
RSLancastr wrote: "Palestine Play-cards", a highly-unusual and hard-to-find deck circa 1920 designed by Israeli artist Ze'ev Raban (better known to playing card collectors for his "Jacob's Bible Cards").
Apparently Raban's attempt at creating a standard design for playing cards for the then-emerging nation of Israel (then known as Palestine), the deck has courts based on people from the Torah (the Old Testament), and suit-signs meaningful within Judaic culture (a Star of David, a menorah, a fig leaf, and something described in some playing card reference books as a "Red Spade".
That "red spade" intrigued me. It was shaped like a spade from a French-suited deck, with what looked like a crown on top of it, all in a deep, bright red. What did it have to do with Israel? - the other three suits were very much rooted in Judaic culture, so I figured this one must be as well, if I could figure out what it was! My friend and fellow playing card collector Robert Kissel - a highly-educated Orthodox Jew - encouraged me to solve the mystery, as it intrigued him as well.
Then, one day during that time, I was walking through the kitchen of my house, and noticed that my then-wife had been working on creating a cornucopia ("a "horn of plenty") centerpiece for our kitchen table. it was full of Fall fruits and vegetables, atop Autumn-colored leaves.
I eyed it as I rounded the table, and suddenly I stopped in my tracks! Among the fruits and veggies was a big, red Pomegranate. And, with its leaves forming a "crown", it was shaped EXACTLY like the "Red Spade" pips in my "Palestine Play-cards" deck!
I had no idea if/how pomegranates related to Israel/Judaism, so I called Robert Kissel and told him of my "discovery", and asked him if pomegranates were somehow meaningful within Israeli/Judaic culture.
Were they ever!! He excitedly told me of how they are mentioned in the Torah as part of God's specific design for The Temple, and as a decoration on the hem of the robes of the Temple Priests. He gave me the number of the curator of a museum of Judaica. When I spoke with the curator, he confirmed that pomegranates were a frequently-occuring symbol within Judaic art. He was familiar with Ze'ev Raban's work (although not his "Palestine Play-cards" deck), and felt confident from my description that the "red spades" were indeed Pomegranates!
The deck's highly-unusual and customized design, and my bit of sleuthing & discovery regarding it, make THIS my absolute favorite deck out of the thousands in my collection. - Q: What deck that you do not have would you most like to have?
RSLancastr wrote: There are so many!
But two which stand out in my mind are "New Era" and "Shuffling Joe", two early American decks. I recently saw "New Era" listed on eBay with a minimum bid of $450.00 - WAAY too rich for my blood!




































































