Morinaga Hakuho playing cards
Artistic playing cards attributed to Morinaga Hakuho and printed by Nintendo, c.1985.
Court cards are presented in puppet-like stances in a surreal, dreamlike setting with smooth gradients and pastel skies. Each suit maintains a unique colour palette and environment. The theme seems to revolve around nature, harmony, and symbolism.
The joker depicts a harlequin standing on a rock, looking through a telescope into the distance with the legend ‘Manufactured by Nintendo’ at the bottom. In complete contrast to the prevailing artistic style on the faces, the back design presents a formal, repeating diamond lattice in reddish-purple, with small crowns and a lion on the central crown. This resembles a form of prestigious branding, but we are unaware of any external affiliation or even a title.
Above: artistic playing cards attributed to Morinaga Hakuho and printed by Nintendo, c.1985. 52 cards + 2 jokers in plastic box in cardboard sleeve.
Joop Muller comments “The name [Morinaga Hakuho] was printed on a small piece of paper, glued to the white carton sleeve in which the plastic box with the deck was. This is not unusual. I've had and probably still have some decks in those ‘named’ white carton sleeves”. The pip cards have the symbols arranged in symmetrical layouts. It has not been possible to find any more background information about this deck. There seem to be 100s of Nintendo decks with not much identification, perhaps private limited editions for small businesses or individual clients.
Reference
Joop Muller DXPO : Morinaga Hakuho deck►
By Jon Randall
Australia • Member since May 28, 2020 • Contact
From 6 or 7 years of age I enjoyed playing cards with my family, and still enjoy a variety of games today with various groups and individuals. I contribute my competitive nature to enjoying games … it’s not that I like to win, I dislike losing! I was barely 10 years old when my great Uncle left me a small collection of playing cards and that was the starting point of my collecting. The competitive streak in me helped develop me into a competitive swimmer that sent me to various places around the world, including a 6 year stint in the US, where for much of that time I was at university. I’ve always enjoyed car boots flea markets, yard sales, charity shops etc., and my eye would never miss a pack of playing cards. Even after my swimming career finished I coached at a high level for many years and continued enjoying the discovery of some great finds around the world. For decades my collection continued to grow, despite selling a portion of it via eBay over the years. It wasn’t until post 2010 that I realised, mostly due to correspondence with Australian friends, that there were so many single playing card collectors. This intrigued me. I had so many packs of cards at home that I made the bold decision to share a good number with singles collectors, and subsequently listed around 7000 for sale on eBay. That did make a dent in my collection, but there’s still around 30,000 packs taking up quite a bit of space at home. Crazy? Yes, but I’ve seen bigger hoards a few times! There’s so many I surprise myself finding packs I forgot I had when I look in a box I’d not seen in a while.
My eBay IDs if you’d like to look are “worldwide_playing_cards” & “playing_cards_world”►
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