At the most recent 52 Plus Joker Conference in Charlotte NC, I first heard about the idea of a Completist Collector. Matt Schacht used the expression in his talk where he self-identified as a Completist Collector meaning (as I understand it), a collector who likes have a defined and finite list of items which he tries to collect all of. As an example in his case, he has focused on The Souvenir Decks mentioned in Hochman Chapter 25.
So I looked at the Transformation decks mentioned by Hochman in Chapter 18 and if I count the modern reproductions (which is as cheesy as can be), I have 6 out of the 15 that Hochman mentions. Here's the status of my collection in completing a collection of the 15 trans decks that Hochman lists.
Hochman Transformation Decks - Chapter 18 | | | | | V 10-28-2025 | Reprints |
| | | | | | |
| T1 | 1833 | BARTLETT | 2023 reprint | Caleb Bartlett, NY, | Identical to three decks produced Europe ~15 years earlier, known as Beatrice or Fracas, | 2023 |
| T2 | 1860 | Samuel Hart | | Samuel Hart & Co., | copied from Braun and Schneider, Munich, Germany ten years earlier | |
| T2a | 1860 | Samuel Hart | | Samuel Hart & Co., | minor changes | |
| T3 | 1876 | ECLIPSE COMIC | deck, 52+J | F.H. Lowerre, NY, | Centennial deck, first original transformation deck to be published in USA | |
| T4 | 1879 | Tiffany Harlequin | reprint | Tiffany & Company, NY, | Teh most artistic of American transformation decks, designed by C.E. Carryl | 1974 |
| T5 | 1883 | Murphy Varnish | | Murphy Varnish Co | Transformation and advertising deck | |
| T6 | 1888 | Harlequin Insert | | Kinney Tobacco Co | Cards individually found in Sweet Caporal cigarette packs | |
| T7 | 1889 | Harlequin Insert | | Kinney Tobacco Co | Collecting all 53 insert cards earned a full size transformation deck (see T8) | |
| T8 | 1889 | Harlequin Insert | | Kinney Tobacco Co | first American transformation deck to include courts with transformed pip designs | |
| T9 | 1895 | HUSTLING JOE I, | | USPC | a clever pseduo transformation deck- see pics | |
| T10 | 1895 | HUSTLING JOE I, | reprint | USPC | Fixed colored background problem which made deck poor for games | reprint |
| T11 | 1895 | Vanity Fair | deck, 52+J | USPC | Transformation deck. Courts are clever & comical but not transofrmed | |
| T12 | 1896 | Y Witches Fortune-Telling | deck, 52+J | USPC | More of a fortune-telling deck but included... | |
| T13 | 1905 | Funny Sport | | Contiental PC Co, NY | Pips had comical faces, every card had a motto or statement | |
| T14 | 1977 | Sutherland-Brown | | Laura Sutherland | Transformation-like | |
If you don't know anything about Transformation decks, click quickly to my introduction
article about Transformation decks. If you do understand the concept, then stick around as I move away from the Hochman completist idea and update you on my transformation deck collecting...
I have recently (October 2025) added two transformation decks to my collection.
Vanity Fair Transformation Deck of 1895. This is the first transformation deck by USPC and it is very well done. Here's a few pip cards.
The royal cards are not transformed but they are original and humorous. The joker is a devil. A complete set of photographs of the deck is available on
the World of Playing Cards (out of England) or on the
World Wide Playing Card Museum website (out of Russia by Alexander Sukhorukov).
A third transformation deck of note that I own is the the Eclipse Comic Playing Cards Deck. It is described in
my previous article on transformation decks. There are also some super interesting modern transformation decks by Peter Wood and by Elaine Lewis. I also, as mentioned in the table above, have some modern reproductions of the best historical transformation decks. Enjoy!
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Thanks for your input and for reading and thinking about jokers.