♣ | ♦ | ♥ | ♠ |
---|---|---|---|
green | blue | red | black |
black | yellow | red | green |
blue | orange | red | black |
blue | yellow | red | black |
green | orange | red | black |
green | yellow | red | blue |
pink | orange | red | black |
pink | yellow | orange | cyan |
Find many great new & used options and get the best deals for Copag 2 Decks 4-color Suits Poker Size Regular Index 100 Plastic Playing Cards at the best online prices at eBay! Free shipping for many products! For you online poker lovers who love four-color decks, you have a few limited options. Copag does have a 4 color option for you on Amazon. The deck even comes with a leather case! Or, if the quality of the card isn't that big of an issue for you, there is also Hesslers Playing Cards, made by Bicycle.
- Love Oracle Cards Deck #2 (4 colors/ Poker Size) Tarot Reading Romance Island Time Wellness Twin Flame Soulmate Aura Lovers Oracle Decks IslandTimeWellness $ 19.00.
- Got mine today from Caragails. First impression is very good, face whiteness and color depth are very good. I have the Copag 4-color deck as well, and the Moidanos have much darker colors and much whiter faces. The Modiano case is very crappy however, it has a cardboard cover and was obviously made for poker-sized cards.
A four-color deck (US) or four-colour pack (UK) is identical to the standard French deck except for the color of the suits. In a typical English four-color deck, hearts are red and spades are black as usual, but clubs are green and diamonds are blue.[1] However, other color combinations have been used over the centuries, in other areas or for certain games.
No-revoke decks[edit]
Four-color decks made for trick-taking games such as bridge, whist, or jass are often called no-revoke decks because they are perceived to reduce the risk of a player accidentally revoking (illegally playing a card of a suit other than that led). Dozens of card manufacturers have developed four-colored suit cards for bridge during the 1900s and continue into this century.
The earliest such deck in the US is by J. Y. Humphreys who created the 'Seminole Wars Deck' in 1819, which had four colored suits of blue spades, green clubs, red hearts and yellow diamonds.[2]
In the German game of skat the official tournament standard since the 1990s is to use a no-revoke deck known as a Turnierbild deck. In these decks, spades are green and diamonds are yellow, the clubs and hearts being respectively black and red as normal, which also reflects the suit order: clubs, spades, hearts, diamonds. This is intended as a compromise for players (typically from former East Germany) who prefer German suits over French; the green spades translate to leaves and the yellow diamonds to bells in the German suits.[1]
In 1922, August Petrtyl & Son produced a tarock deck with black clubs, yellow diamonds, pink hearts, and green spades in the United States. They were sold in two versions, a full 78-card deck and a 54-card deck.[2] The smaller deck is structured the same as Industrie und Glück decks as it was designed to play a variant of Königrufen.[3]
4 Color Poker Deck Boards
Poker[edit]
Four-color decks made for trick-taking games such as bridge, whist, or jass are often called no-revoke decks because they are perceived to reduce the risk of a player accidentally revoking (illegally playing a card of a suit other than that led). Dozens of card manufacturers have developed four-colored suit cards for bridge during the 1900s and continue into this century.
The earliest such deck in the US is by J. Y. Humphreys who created the 'Seminole Wars Deck' in 1819, which had four colored suits of blue spades, green clubs, red hearts and yellow diamonds.[2]
In the German game of skat the official tournament standard since the 1990s is to use a no-revoke deck known as a Turnierbild deck. In these decks, spades are green and diamonds are yellow, the clubs and hearts being respectively black and red as normal, which also reflects the suit order: clubs, spades, hearts, diamonds. This is intended as a compromise for players (typically from former East Germany) who prefer German suits over French; the green spades translate to leaves and the yellow diamonds to bells in the German suits.[1]
In 1922, August Petrtyl & Son produced a tarock deck with black clubs, yellow diamonds, pink hearts, and green spades in the United States. They were sold in two versions, a full 78-card deck and a 54-card deck.[2] The smaller deck is structured the same as Industrie und Glück decks as it was designed to play a variant of Königrufen.[3]
4 Color Poker Deck Boards
Poker[edit]
A four-color deck for poker using the black spades, red hearts, green clubs, and blue diamonds was developed and publicized by Mike Caro. It was introduced at his World Poker Finals at Foxwoods Resort Casino in 1992. His original design was not a success as the colors were a surprise to players.[4] The World Poker Tour uses the same colors as Caro's deck to display the players' cards for increased visibility on small television screens.
Four-color decks have become a somewhat popular option in online poker software interfaces since often each player may use their preferred design of playing cards without affecting others' experience, and since visibility is not as good on a small screen as in face-to-face play, especially as many online players play multiple tables simultaneously, with shorter time limits in which to make decisions. Having each suit represented by a different color can allow players to more easily recognize a flush.
References[edit]
- ^ abPollett, Andrea. Sizes, Shapes and Colours at Andy's Playing Cards. Retrieved 15 March 2017.
- ^ abDawson, Tom; Dawson, Judy (2014). The Hochman Encyclopedia of American Playing Cards (2nd ed.). New York: Conjuring Arts Research Center. pp. 233–238.
- ^Dummett, Michael; McLeod, John (2009). A History of Games Played with the Tarot Pack (Supplement ed.). Oxford: Maproom Publications. pp. S 39-S 43.
- ^'Mike Caro's Four Color Deck' by Diane McHaffie, Poker Player February, 2006 issue
4 Color Poker Deck Kits
Comments
Party Poker 4 Color Deck
- pgearan
@chris1980 said:
since this change i am misscklicking constantly, please change it back!!If you go into Change Options in any game, you can click off Use Four Color Deck in bottom right corner and it will revert to the traditional deck.
- krista
LOVE IT!!!! ty .. helps us blondes get suits right....
Mr Blay .. the blue and green are pale and washed out... maybe make them darker?
- krista
i know of no one play for monies that doesn't use 4 colour
so ty make that
- highfivePlayed a couple sessions with 4 color deck. Agree with krista. The new colors are too light.
I am surprised you didnt go with the whole card being a certain color.
No problem for me. I can use the traditional deck. - pgearan
@highfive said:
Played a couple sessions with 4 color deck. Agree with krista. The new colors are too light.
I am surprised you didnt go with the whole card being a certain color.
No problem for me. I can use the traditional deck.We agree, and are in the process changing over to a deeper color.
- krista
claps... Krista does a happy dance!
- pgearan
The colors have been updated to be darker. Let us know what you think.
- krista
they are lovely ... ty making them
hugs
- apt_gs
I like the 4 color deck.
- baldrick
I use a four color deck all of the time when I play on line. A four color deck is a necessity when a player multi tables in my opinion.