just imagine
52 accessories on the front. 52 outfits on the back. Dark, Y2K, and unapologetically fashion-obsessed.
Poker meets UNO in one colorful deck. 56 cards. Two decks combined let you play a full game of UNO.
One place. 55 cards. A single landscape photographed from above, each card a different face of the same sky.
In the south of Taiwan, where the island narrows into the Pacific, the wind never stops. The grass leans in one direction. The horizon refuses to end.
This is where the deck begins.
Each card holds a real place — Hengchun Peninsula 恆春, Longpan Grassland 龍磐, and the southern coastline between — folded in 360°, captured as a single sphere. A landscape small enough to hold in your hand.
The back of every card is the same: a spring field, suspended in stillness. Wherever the game takes you, you remain here, on the same earth.
Shuffle. Deal. Play any game you know.
just imagine. — stable.
55 Cards · 67×90mm · Standard Poker Size · $14.95 Join the WaitlistPlanet Playing Cards — dropping 2026. Get notified on release.
Poker × UNO in one deck
Two games. One deck. The 56 cards play as a standard poker deck on their own — but buy two, shuffle them together, and you have a full game of UNO. The colour is the point: four suits, four colours, bold enough to deal across any table and impossible to ignore once you've seen them spread.
Every outfit starts somewhere. For stable., it started in the wardrobe — taking clothes, accessories, and the logic of getting dressed and turning them into a deck of cards.
The front face carries the accessory: spikes, chains, sculpted hardware, the details that define a look before the rest follows. Flip the card and the outfit appears — one of 52, each a distinct world. Dark. Y2K. Considered.
Two faces, infinite pairings. Soft-handling stock and tight cuts built for packet work and card flourishes. Made in Taiwan.
A cardistry move, frozen across 125 pages. Flip at your own speed — fast for the show, slow to study every micro-rotation. Tactile motion, in a way no phone screen can give you.
A two-handed packet bloom that opens like a lotus and re-stacks in the same breath. Captured at 24fps over 5 seconds — every micro-rotation laid out in print so you can study the move frame by frame.
Starting from Z-grip, opening like a flower blossom, turning into a four-packet display — then collapsing 4-2-1. One side: front view. Flip the book around: same move from the cardist's POV.
Phone slow-mo disappears the moment you scroll. A flipbook stays on the shelf, catches a guest's eye, and rewards anyone curious enough to pick it up. Cardistry frozen in print — half art object, half instruction manual you actually want to keep.