The Angel Tarot Cards
Browse all 78 recovered Jayne Wallace Angel Tarot card images in a native TarotFans gallery. Tap any card to open a larger carousel view.
The Angel Tarot Review: quick take
The Angel Tarot by Jayne Wallace is a gentle, pastel-toned tarot deck that keeps classic tarot titles while pairing each card with angelic imagery and a soft spiritual atmosphere. The video review for this page shows the Jayne Wallace deck — not the blue Doreen Virtue/Radleigh Valentine Angel Tarot Cards deck — so the gallery and card studies below use the matching Jayne Wallace card images.
This deck is best for readers who want tarot to feel calm, protective, and emotionally easy to approach. It still has the familiar 78-card tarot structure, but the artwork gives even intense cards a more compassionate, guiding voice.
What The Angel Tarot feels like in a reading
The Angel Tarot reads like a calm conversation. The cards keep recognizable names such as The Magician, The High Priestess, The Star, Ace of Wands, and Queen of Cups, but the art softens the message through angels, wings, light, and pastel color.
If you love decks that feel reassuring without abandoning traditional tarot structure, this version can be very approachable. If you want a darker, sharper, or more occult-looking deck, it may feel too gentle.
Card moment: major arcana angels
Classic titles with a softer angelic tone




These majors match the deck shown in the video thumbnail: pale angel artwork, classic tarot titles, and a gentle spiritual feeling rather than the blue renamed-card Angel Tarot Cards system.
Deck details at a glance
- Deck: The Angel Tarot by Jayne Wallace
- Structure: 78-card tarot deck with classic titles and angelic artwork
- Best for: beginners, daily pulls, spiritual journaling, gentle relationship readings, and intuitive reflection
- Not ideal for: readers who want dark shadow work, harsh symbolism, or a very blunt deck voice
- Look for: angel figures, wings, halos, color mood, gestures, suit symbols, and the emotional tone of each scene

The Fool: trust, openness, and protected beginnings
The Fool keeps the classic message of a new journey, but the angelic artwork makes the leap feel less reckless and more supported. It is still a card of movement, risk, and fresh starts, but the tone is kind rather than chaotic.
In a daily reading, this card can ask you to begin without demanding that you already know every step. The practical message is simple: stay open, move lightly, and let the next step teach you.

The Star: hope, healing, and emotional renewal
The Star is one of the easiest places to see why this deck works for gentle readings. The card keeps its traditional meaning of healing and faith, but the angelic figure makes hope feel close and personal.
Use this card as a soft reset. It can point to rest, forgiveness, spiritual support, or one small healing action that helps you trust life again.

Ace of Swords: clarity with a kinder edge
The Ace of Swords carries the suit’s truth and mental clarity, but the deck’s soft visual style keeps the message from feeling cold. It can show a new idea, a needed conversation, or the moment when confusion finally clears.
Ask: what is the clean truth here, and how can I speak it without turning it into a weapon?
Artwork and first impression
The artwork is airy, pale, and angelic, with a very different mood from the deeper blue Doreen Virtue deck that is also often called Angel Tarot. Jayne Wallace’s version uses classic tarot card names and a watercolor-like softness that feels devotional and easy to sit with.
That makes the deck inviting for readers who want tarot without heavy darkness. Cards like Death, The Devil, and The Tower still exist, but their presentation feels more compassionate than frightening.
Card moment: wands energy
Movement, courage, and creative fire




The Wands cards keep the suit’s fire, but the deck presents courage as guided movement rather than pressure to perform.
How it reads for beginners
The Angel Tarot can be beginner-friendly because the titles are familiar and the artwork is emotionally approachable. You do not have to translate renamed suits or alternate card titles before you begin.
Still, beginners should remember that gentle art does not erase the card’s meaning. If a difficult card appears, ask what support, boundary, or honest action the card recommends.
Love, relationship, and emotional readings
For relationship readings, this deck is best at exploring emotional needs, trust, repair, forgiveness, and boundaries. It is less useful for dramatic yes-or-no questions and better for prompts like “What needs healing here?” or “What would make this connection healthier?”
The soft tone can help sensitive readers stay grounded. It encourages compassion without letting you skip the practical question: what needs to change in real life?
Card moment: cups and pentacles support
Emotion, care, patience, and practical grounding




These cards show why the deck works well for emotional check-ins: it keeps feelings tender while still asking for patience, care, and grounded follow-through.
Pros and Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Warm, gentle, and spiritually reassuring deck voice. | May feel too soft for readers who want direct shadow work. |
| Uses classic tarot titles, so beginners do not have to relearn renamed cards. | The angel theme is central, so you need to enjoy that spiritual language. |
| Good for daily pulls, journaling, love readings, and spiritual reflection. | Collectors should double-check the cover and artwork because several different decks are called Angel Tarot. |
| Full 78-card gallery makes it easy to preview the exact deck shown in the video. |
Final thoughts on The Angel Tarot
The Angel Tarot by Jayne Wallace is a good match if you want a deck that feels gentle, spiritual, and emotionally supportive while still using familiar tarot structure. It is especially useful for beginners, daily guidance, and readers who want tarot to feel like a calm conversation rather than a confrontation.
Because there are multiple decks with very similar names, compare the cover and card art before buying. This review and gallery match the Jayne Wallace deck shown in the video.
FAQ
Is this the Jayne Wallace Angel Tarot?
Yes. This page is matched to the Jayne Wallace Angel Tarot shown in the video, with pale angel artwork and classic tarot card titles.
Is this the same as the Doreen Virtue Angel Tarot Cards?
No. The Doreen Virtue/Radleigh Valentine Angel Tarot Cards deck uses blue borders, renamed cards such as The Dreamer and Renewal, and suits like Fire, Water, Earth, and Air. This review uses the Jayne Wallace deck shown in the video.
Is The Angel Tarot good for beginners?
Yes, it can be a good beginner deck if you like gentle spiritual imagery. The classic titles make it easier to connect the cards with standard tarot meanings.
What readings is The Angel Tarot best for?
It is strongest for daily pulls, emotional check-ins, journaling, relationship questions, spiritual reflection, and readings where reassurance helps you stay open.
Who should skip The Angel Tarot?
Skip it if you want a blunt, shadow-heavy, or very dark tarot deck. The Angel Tarot is intentionally gentle, so it may not satisfy readers who prefer sharper symbolism.
How should I compare The Angel Tarot before buying?
Look at the cover and several cards in the gallery. Since multiple decks share the Angel Tarot name, matching the artwork is the safest way to make sure you are buying the deck you want.