Something as simple as 54 small printed cards can have a huge impact upon human social history. From before the Middle Ages decks of playing cards have been used for games, fortune telling, gambling, magic tricks, and teaching mathematics (probability theory). Playing cards have embraced the widespread use of computers and the Internet and have long gone digital. Computers often come with card games, and online card games are popular. Published here are a set of SVG playing cards for use on computers and in apps. They can be downloaded from here as a zip file. Low resolution playing card graphics images are also in the zip file. An example is this Ace of Spades (the other playing card images are individually provided later in this article). Other bitmap densities of playing card files can be generated from the vector files using a drawing program, e.g. Inkscape.

So what are SVG playing cards? SVG is for Scaler Vector Graphics. SVG is a graphics format that stores images as vectors (lines of a given length and angle), and other mathematical based elements. These mathematical elements describe an image. This is different from the common way of representing images as dots or pixels. The SVG format allows images to be scaled to different sizes without any loss of "sharpness". This makes an image of a playing card stored as SVG very useful. It can be resized without becoming blurry, and can be used to produce pixel based, or bitmap, images of playing cards at different sizes for different screen resolutions.


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To obtain playing cards bitmaps at higher resolutions use one of the playing cards vector images and export it from a graphics program at a high dots per inch (DPI) setting. An example of a image program that can export SVGs to bitmaps, such as portable network graphic (PNG) format, is Inkscape (which you can download and use for free).

There are thousands of playing card images available from the Internet. What this SVG resource has is the full deck of cards images, and that includes SVG images of Joker cards, which are often overlooked. In addition, useful for developing apps that use playing cards, are card backs, and a blank card. Futhermore, the card symbols for the suits have been made slightly different from what has been seen before.

What good is a set of playing card images if they cannot be freely used for any purpose. Fortunately, since playing cards have been around for hundreds of years, the commonly seen designs are free to use by anyone. The common designs are Public Domain playing card images. What is Public Domain? It means the image designs are not under copyright. Despite plenty of weird, wonderful, and imaginative playing card designs emerging, the traditional designs still dominate because of their familiarity, simplicity, cleaness, and being free to use and freely adapted by others. That has been done here. Despite tweaks to the pips and fonts, these vector playing cards are placed into the Public Domain. To use these card images no permission is required. Download them for free, no royalty payment is asked or required. I do ask you to provide a link to this article, it would be appreciated for the hard work that has gone into creating and maintaining this resource. Suggestions for improvements to the SVG playing cards are welcome.

Here are exported playing card bitmaps, PNGs, of the clubs suit from the SVG playing card images. Inkscape was used to export the PNGs at 96 DPI. Click on the card to see the SVG version (use the back button to return).

If you have found these Public Domain SVG Playing Card images useful please provide a link to this article, it would be appreciated for the hard work that has gone into creating and maintaining this resource. Drop me an email, dan@tekeye.uk with information on your completed project that uses these playing card images and I will add a link to it.

Tek Eye on the 3rd January 2021 at 16:04 said: Thanks for liking these playing card images Anton. The Ace of Spaces slogan is a play on two historical aspects of the Ace of Spaces playing card. Firstly, the Ace of Spades was traditionally a more ornate card because it needed to indicate that a tax, or duty, had been paid to the relevant authorities. Such duties not longer exist, but ornate Aces of Spades are still produced. An ornate Ace of Spades sometimes includes a skull in its design, maybe derived from old French fortune-telling tradition where an Ace of Spades indicated bad luck or a future death. Therefore, we have the Ace of Spades as a death card and its link to paying duty, or tax. The added phrase, Living a good life is duty paid., is saying living an honourable and good life (being good to yourself, others and the planet) is your payment to the world for the time you spend alive on it.

The one vital thing you really have to look out for in playing cards (with the standard faces) is the jokers, ace of spades, and the back designs. Since these Jokers look sub-par, I'm very confident he created them from scratch. Also, it seems this deck doesn't have any backs to them, thus you can forget about that ordeal. The only thing that makes me a little uneasy is the Ace of Spades. I don't know if that center spade is public domain, I'll try to look a little further.

I have several images from a video extracted at different times. I have a reference deck always at a fixed position that I know the size of. Assuming that the distortion, focal length of the camera and the distance is not known (this will be a software package sold commercially so these parameters are unknown).

The problem starts when the reference deck is not at the same distance as the deck I am trying to measure but closer to the camera. In this case since one of the decks are closer to the camera both decks may appear to have the same pixel height although the one in the back contains more cards.

There is something that we are sure about it: The real size of each card! You know that all cards have the same width and height (in real world), so the only thing you need to do is to find the width of upper card on the first stack and also the second stack in the image. Since these two numbers are related to each other, now you can have the ratios of the dimensions around the deck 1 and deck 2.

For example, consider width of each card (the red arrows) is 5 cm and this width in the image for the first deck is 80 pixels and for the second deck is 40 pixels. So the ratio is 2. Now For comparing those black lines, just multiply the second line's length with 2 and compare the result number with the first line's length.

You have lots of way to estimate the width of each card deck. Extracting the widths might be hard so I suggest to compare the width of the patterns (the yellow arrows) and for this, I would do such method:

I am looking for high quality images of poker cards to download. I can use Google Images to download the images, but it would be impossible to find 53 identical cards in terms of style (52 cards + 1 joker card). Does anybody know where can I get these images from?

A full set of poker playing cards created using vector graphics. The .SVG source for each card is available as well as a high resolution rasterized .PNG version. These images are released into the public domain - attribution is appreciated but not required.

For those searching for playing card images, I have produced a complete pack that uses a variation on the standard design of pips. The SVG playing cards I have made are a full deck (52 cards + Jokers) and card backs.

We at MPC have 11 different professional playing cards grade card stocks for you to choose from. 11 paper stock and 100% plastic stock all of which are sourced from leading industrial paper manufacturers who stock the best and highest quality playing card stock used for top retail card games.

Reducing use of non-environmentally friendly materials such as plastic to package playing card decks to help save the earth. MPC is going greener with their packaging and reducing the use of plastic for a more sustainable future.

print different sizes of playing cards for your business needs, printing on both face and back of card deck with custom boxes. New blank game card decks are now available for sale on makeplayingcards.com. we have introduced a number of card sizes including domino cards, square cards, rounded cards hex cards as well as other sizes.

Create your own tuck boxes for your playing cards with no minimum order quantity. Order from as little as 1 box and delivered worldwide. Download our custom tuck box template and send back to us for print.

You can create your card designs in seconds with our revolutionary and user-friendly online card maker and have your customized cards delivered direct to your door in less than a week, whether you are in the US, UK, Canada, Australia, Singapore, Europe or anywhere else in the world, we will deliver straight to you or your customers. With smart technology built into our online system, you can ensure your DIY playing card designs are nothing less than perfect. Our online maker is smart enough to guide you through image resolution requirements, positioning, and identify possible printing issues. No downloads needed.

We cater for any industry that requires high quality playing cards. Our customer base ranges from tabletop games industry, educational sectors, retail and resellers, hospitality services, professional services, corporate marketing and more. The list is endless but they all have one thing in common and that is the requirement for high quality customized playing cards, a professional hassle-free service with a super quick turnaround time. See below for samples.

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