Orbit V7 Playing Cards
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Orbit V7 Playing Cards is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
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LIMITED EDITION: Will NOT be reprinted.
Welcome back guys! Chris here. Welcome to the seventh edition. Orbits are going 80s. For this edition, the crew and I sat down and reviewed a lot of 80s art to come to this final design. We missed clean borders and wanted something more minimal than the V6 but still with the element of intricacy within some part of it.
The V7 features a pink dominant center along with the mountain range from the V5 Orbits that are now inverted, so they are a window to whats behind the card rather than the original mountains. Upon close inspection, constellations can be seen in the star belt.The rainbow at the bottom of the box inside the Orbit logo is a direct tribute to the lives lost in the 1986 space shuttle Challenger on their mission STS-51-L.
The last names of the crew can be found on the inside of the V7 tuck because those who gave their lives for space exploration should never be forgotten.
NASA halted missions for 2 years after the tragedy but when they came back, the mission patches had a rainbow in the center to signify life along with 7 orange stars to remember the 7 lives lost. Gregory Jarvis, Christa McAuliffe, Ronald McNair, Ellison Onizuka, Judith Resnik, Michael Smith, and Dick Scobee.
The rainbow was saying that NASA is back and alive but will carry the life of their fallen astronauts. It is a beautiful tribute to the lives lost in 1986. Were doing our part to ensure their legacy lives on.
Pips and indices. I knew I wanted a retro design that people would have been using in the 80s. I asked USPC if they had the retro Arrco pip package. Their archives didnt go back that far.
Luckily, I have a retro Arrco deck in my private collection from the 70s that Nick Stumphauzer gave to me as a gift -- it was found in his grandparents attic. Holly scanned over the cards, we sent them to Daniel, and he did the rest. If you look closely at the pips and indices, yousee that they are a bit thinner than previous Orbit pip packages (that are also Arrco) and look a little wavy. This was not an accident. I wanted to capture the essence of a 70
Welcome back guys! Chris here. Welcome to the seventh edition. Orbits are going 80s. For this edition, the crew and I sat down and reviewed a lot of 80s art to come to this final design. We missed clean borders and wanted something more minimal than the V6 but still with the element of intricacy within some part of it.
The V7 features a pink dominant center along with the mountain range from the V5 Orbits that are now inverted, so they are a window to whats behind the card rather than the original mountains. Upon close inspection, constellations can be seen in the star belt.The rainbow at the bottom of the box inside the Orbit logo is a direct tribute to the lives lost in the 1986 space shuttle Challenger on their mission STS-51-L.
The last names of the crew can be found on the inside of the V7 tuck because those who gave their lives for space exploration should never be forgotten.
NASA halted missions for 2 years after the tragedy but when they came back, the mission patches had a rainbow in the center to signify life along with 7 orange stars to remember the 7 lives lost. Gregory Jarvis, Christa McAuliffe, Ronald McNair, Ellison Onizuka, Judith Resnik, Michael Smith, and Dick Scobee.
The rainbow was saying that NASA is back and alive but will carry the life of their fallen astronauts. It is a beautiful tribute to the lives lost in 1986. Were doing our part to ensure their legacy lives on.
Pips and indices. I knew I wanted a retro design that people would have been using in the 80s. I asked USPC if they had the retro Arrco pip package. Their archives didnt go back that far.
Luckily, I have a retro Arrco deck in my private collection from the 70s that Nick Stumphauzer gave to me as a gift -- it was found in his grandparents attic. Holly scanned over the cards, we sent them to Daniel, and he did the rest. If you look closely at the pips and indices, yousee that they are a bit thinner than previous Orbit pip packages (that are also Arrco) and look a little wavy. This was not an accident. I wanted to capture the essence of a 70