The Cardsleeve of Many Things

For the many, many Decks of Many Things



A variety of different decks of many things, such as the deck of wonder, deck of many more things, deck of wondrous power, deck of hazards and more, laid out below a book labelled all the many things, and some purple and black fabrics.
Oh wow, this has been taking me FAR longer than I expected. I figured like... a one-weekend build? Sure, let's knock it out, call it a day, and move on to other things. Nnnnnope, it turns out this was going to take weekend after weekend, waiting for accessories towards the end... this ended up being a bit of a long slog.

First up, I needed to make another copy of all of the many things decks (see the bookbinding page for that book), which in itself took an unexpectedly long time, since ther eis an unexpectedly large number of them lol. I also decided to make a separate deck for the 13 card and 22 card versions that have those options, to make it easier to draw from the respective decks without needing to sort through individual cards. On a related note, the wonderful people at Wizards of the Coast created a magic item that uses the remainder of a deck of playing cards, the Deck of Miscellany, which conveniently gave me a whole pile of those to be able to sell as well!

Now on to the sleeve. Sleeves? Pocketsheet. This thing! We had spare purple fabric from the merchant bag, and black fabric from some scrap cloth laying around. I began by making long strips of the purple fabric, wrapping around the edges to prevent fraying, with a triple-layer of itself in a strip near the center for a buttonhole to add a pull ribbon to be able to pop each deck up by tugging on the ribbon, for easy selection and added bling (see later). It seems that there are two "standard" card sizes, one about 3mm wider than the other, so for each we made the pocket able to fit the widest standard size, as each of these will be for sale, and be replaced after each sale. Also taking into account, I needed to sew each pocket size to account for the different thicknesses of decks, since there are vastly different sizes ranging from the 11 card Deck of Chance to the 78 card Tarot of Many Things. We also added some added slack to each with a stack of about 10 cards to avoid the pockets being sewn too tight to slide easily.

Once I had all of these horozontal purple strips added, after much, much measuring and chalk lines, I created a bottom to each of the pockets with with a wide black ribbon, since the sides of these were all already folded over to not fray, and were of course sized to each deck as needed. Since all of this made for 17 needed pockets, I did three rows of six to give me 18 pockets, the last of which can hold dice or be used for expansion should another deck show up in the future. On that note, I can always combine the 13 and 22 card decks for those respective items into the same pocket should I need further expansion on top of that. Or I suppose add a column of three to the side, or another row underneath, y'know there's plenty of options. In either case, this will do me for a while.

With the pockets now all created, I needed to add the pull ribbons to each pocket. Now, for this I pondered for a while, what kind of decoration could I add to each ribbon to pull on, to add the aformentioned bling. I optioned to myself buttons (meh), kinda little woven loops of woody vine (cool, but potentially breakable once they dry out), and then I thought... coins! Like the obligatory copper, silver, and gold coins! Now, I'd first pondered just getting cheap fake-treasure plastic coins that look like treasure coins, and painting each in the respective colours, but couldn't find any in person in-store. So I thought, since I need to order online for this anyway, I may as well get 3d prints for the canon shapes for the D&D coins! Then I can have alternating copper, silver, and gold coins, with one platinum at the very end!

AND! AND, I could still take one of those plastic treasure coins (I ordered some of those too for this specifically), and make a Thonian gold coin!!! This calls back to Raven's epic quest (YouTube playlist), specifically Temple of the Frog (YouTube video), so we took one of those plastic coins, added a bit of JB Weld around the rim both for strength, and as well to be able to write into the wet epoxy the needed text, Uther Once And Always, and just the empire name Thonia on the back, since that side isn't described. By chance the plastic treasure coins that we found did have the profile of a bearded man, as described of the coin, and so after the JB Weld modification, we painted it gold, and while the text isn't as clean as an actual stamped coin, I'm going to canonically chalk it up to the technology to make them 4000 years ago wasn't as tight as it is today, let's go with that. Not that anyone will really see it, since it'll be behind the shop table, and will only really be seen glanced at a sharp angle as people walk past my booth, so it's just flavour for flavour's sake really. But, a Thonian gold coin!

And then, the 3d printed coins arrived! <to be finished once they actually arrive, they're still in the mail atm, also that last linked image isn't done yet since the coin is still drying with its first layer of paint lol>

Created Month x, 2025
The start of the project, a pile of shimmering purple fabric, a book labelled all the many things, and a variety of different types of decks of many things, all laying on the black fabric that will become the back of the sheet of pockets.

The band of purple fabric being sized to be just slightly taller than the height of a regular deck of cards.The sewing machine midway through sewing the purple band onto the black fabric, which itself is also slightly shimmery.

The top row of pockets completed, with the decks of many things slipped into their appropriate pockets, laying in front of the sewing machine on the work table.The second row complete, and the third row of purple beginning to be sewn onto the black fabric, with chalk lines on the black to guide me as I sew the pockets on.

Showing how I size the bottoms of the pockets, which was also how I sized the purple band itself, having the deck itself, along with a taped together stack of about 10 cards for added size to allow the deck to slide in and out easily.The bottom of one of the pockets shown, the black ribbon sewn to both the purple fabric as well as the black back sheet, making a completed pocket sized to the deck.

The pockets all fully completed, each containing their respective decks, but without any pull ribbons, except one in the bottom left which I put in for concept testing, and also without labels on each of the pockets.


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