Alexander Daniloff Lenormand Oracle 2021
Alexander Daniloff Lenormand Oracle 2021
Alexander Daniloff Lenormand Oracle 2021
II Edition
APRIL 2021
WHO AND WHAT IS THE LENORMAND ORACLE?
Marie Anne Adelaide Lenormand was a famous fortune-teller in Napoleonic-era France. After
her death in 1843, European games manufacturers capitalised on her fame by using her name to
promote new card games such as this, the Lenormand Oracle.
The additional Lord and Lady cards allow the reader to make a wider and more inclusive range
of relationship pairings.
In April 2021, Alexander revisited this, his first Lenormand, and made some changes. Firstly the
size of this second edition deck is a slightly broader 'poker size' of 89mm x 64mm
(3.5" x 2.5"). The Limited Edition signed card has also been updated too. The card stock remains
the same quality game card stock with a smooth finish. The second edition deck has a beautiful
new box and card back which easily distinguishes it from the original version.
Here is the new Anchor card on left, in comparison with the original Anchor card on right.
In addition, there are completely new images for all four Lord and Lady cards which allow the
two Lord cards to be inclined towards each other and the two Lady cards too – if you wish to use
the single-sex pairings in your readings.
All the other card images are slightly larger to accommodate the new card size, but they are
otherwise unchanged apart from new locations for the card name and number – both pieces of
information are now to be found at the foot of the card.
Each card is listed in numerical order, followed by its playing card insert and then the Grand
Tableau House name. A basic interpretative outline then follows to help you read the cards.
Please note that Alexander's deck contains additional Lord and Lady cards to help create
many permutations of partnership. Use only the best two options for your sitter. Do not use
all four cards within a reading.
This leaflet will merely provide you with the first steps on your Lenormand journey – there are
many wonderful resources which are available in many languages that will help you develop your
skills and provide nuanced and useful readings. Some Lenormand resources are suggested on p9.
Lenormand readings are usually Strings, Grids or a Grand Tableau. They mostly interpreted in
pairs.
Significators
Significators are important beginning points in Lenormand readings. In the Daniloff Oracle, you are
provided with two options for Cards for 28 and 29. If your sitter identifies as male, you can use the
28 Lord card. If your sitter identifies as female, the 28 Lady card may be chosen.
Your sitter's partner or significant other can be represented by any one of the other significators
provided (M/F, M/M, F/F or F/M).
You can, of course, allow a significator to arise randomly from any part of the deck. You may also
wish to choose an appropriate significator depending upon the topic of the reading. For example: a
reading concerning money may lead you to select Fish as the significator. A reading about a friend
may lead you to select Dog.
Card Order
The order of the two cards makes a difference to how you interpret them. For example:
Mirroring
You can read one card and pair it with any card which lies in a mirrored position. For example,
in the 3-card string outlined below, Scythe mirrors Dog. This is very useful in spreads of five or
more cards.
Corners
If you are performing a 3 x 3 card grid or a Grand Tableau, you can also read the corner cards of
your spread as pairs. These can be interpreted as the 'boundaries' or 'limitations' of the spread.
Cross
In a grid spread or a Grand Tableau, the cards that lie either side of the central significator card
and directly above and below, form a cross. These can be read together in pairs too. Since these
cards are in direct contact with the significator, they are very close or very strongly felt.
Knighting
If you are familiar with the game of chess, you will know how the Knight chess piece moves –
two to the side and one up or down, or one to the side and two up or down. These can be read in
pairs.
As you can see, the possibilities for multiple pairing explains why Lenormand cards do not have
positional values in a reading in the same way as Tarot cards do.
READING IN STRINGS
Unlike Tarot readings which can often be a single card, Lenormand readings are divined in 'strings'
of two or more cards and read in pairs. Using a string of up to seven cards will provide a very
detailed answer to a question.
Strings are read from left to right, with the first card regarded as the main topic under
consideration and the other cards affecting it. Here is an example:
Lenormand cards can be taken very literally and Dog CAN mean a dog or Rider could refer to
equestrian sports or someone one horseback!
For readings of more than seven cards, use a grid format. The most common box format for
Lenormand readings is the 3 x 3 grid for nine cards.
Scythe is the central card and is a randomly chosen significator – so the spread wants to talk
about swift endings.
The first card laid is Cross, then Bouquet, Tower and Dog. The spread ends with Star.
Do not be daunted by the number of cards – start with Cross, Bouquet and Tower and interpret
as a string of three cards, reading in pairs. Then move onto the middle line and then the bottom
line. Then do the same with the cards that make up the three columns.
Here are some examples of the mirror, corner, cross and knighting cards mentioned earlier, as
they arise in this 3 x 3 spread.
Mirrored cards – Dog mirrors Key, Cross mirrors Star, Tower also mirrors Star etc.
The corner cards are Cross and Tower, Sun and Star.
The cross cards are Bouquet and Key, Dog and Moon
The Knighting cards: Cross is knighted by Key and Moon. For Bouquet the knighting cards are
Sun and Star etc.
The largest spread that you can perform with the Lenormand Oracle is The Grand Tableau.
READING THE GRAND TABLEAU - BASICS
In this spread, the cards are shuffled and laid out in four rows of eight cards (4 x 8), beginning
with the top left card as the first card laid down. The last four cards in your hand are laid in a
separate row, beneath the final row of eight cards. All 36 cards are now used.
This is a very in-depth reading, but all the techniques outlined above can be used in the Grand
Tableau.
To begin, find your sitter's significator (Lord or Lady) and the card for their significant other.
Also consider the card that best represents the sitter's topic for the spread (for a health issue, this
could be Tree) or perhaps the card representing the Significant Other.
Work your way methodically (in pairs) through the cross cards, the corner cards, the knighting
cards, mirroring cards, 3 x 3 grids etc. Make sense of the cards in the context of your sitter's
question.
Near or Far
In the Grand Tableau especially, cards that are close to the Significator (ie touching) are
regarded as near. Their effects will be strong on your sitter or happening soon. Cards that are far
away from the significator are further away in time or weaker in their effects.
Houses
Although all our cards are placed randomly in the rows of the Tableau, we can regard each space
that they occupy as a 'House'.
For example, the first card in our Grand Tableau may be Anchor, but the HOUSE belongs to 1
The Rider. Mice may be the second card in our Tableau, and it is in the HOUSE of 2 Clover …
the last card in the Tableau falls on the House of the Cross. Interpret the card in relation to the
House, just as you would if they were before you as a pair of cards.
If you look at the list of keywords provided earlier in this leaflet, you will see suggestions for
each House. You can then interpret important cards in the Tableau with regard to the House that
they are on.
Pay attention to the cards which land on the tricky Houses (eg House of Scythe) and which
Houses the tricky cards (eg Coffin) land on. Also, see where the lucky cards land and which
cards are on the lucky Houses.
The final four cards which do not lie on the four main rows are not part of the Grand Tableau
reading. BUT, you can, of course, read them as a small spread in itself. These cards are not
active in the Tableau.
There is so much more to learn about reading the Grand Tableau, so please make use of
the many wonderful online and published resources to continue your learning journey.
ABOUT ALEXANDER DANILOFF AND HIS WORK
If you are new to Alexander Daniloff's work, please visit his website at:
http://www.daniloff-art.it
There you will be able to explore all his Tarot and Oracle imagery as well as his commissioned
artworks.
Facebook: @TarotByAlexanderDaniloff/
Instagram: @alexanderdaniloff
LENORMAND RESOURCES
Books
Videos
Leaflet for Alexander Daniloff's Lenormand Oracle by Alison Cross: All errors and omissions are my own.