A digital table for tarot.
Divine (v) is built around an open table where cards can be drawn, arranged, and returned to over time. Rather than prescribing spreads or generating interpretations, it offers a simple space in which readings can develop freely and attention can remain with the cards.
The app includes a small collection of historical tarot decks. You can also create and share your own decks from photographs or other images.
Readings can be saved and revisited, shared as images, or sent to another Divine user as an interactive table that can be opened and continued. Individual cards can be shared as well.
Divine is not a conventional tarot-learning app. It is designed for people who already have, or wish to develop, their own relationship with tarot. It can also be used with personal image decks, extending the same open table to other kinds of visual practice.
The About page describes the thinking that lead to and has shaped the app.
Beta testing
Divine is currently in public beta. I am looking for people to use it in real practice and share what feels clear, useful, missing, or awkward. To join, use the Join beta link in the header above.
I'm interested in hearing from people with a wide range of experience: those completely new to tarot, those who are still developing a practice, experienced readers, and people using Divine with their own image decks. Each perspective reveals different strengths and weaknesses.
Feedback is most useful when it comes from real use: what feels clear or unclear, what works naturally, what feels missing, and how the app fits—or does not fit—into an existing practice.
In development
- iCloud storage: Make decks, saved readings, and related settings easier to carry between devices while keeping the app usable when iCloud is unavailable.
- Card image framing: Allow each card image to be cropped, repositioned, zoomed, and rotated directly in the card editor without changing the original image file.
- A more natural shuffle: Give each deck a persistent shuffled order, so draws and returned cards behave more like a handled deck rather than a sequence of independent random choices.
- Undo and redo for the table: Make ordinary reading actions—drawing, moving, rotating, revealing, returning, and clearing cards—easy to reverse without interrupting the flow of a reading.
Quality, clarity, and stability remain the priorities. The purpose of the beta is not only to find bugs, but to learn what kind of practice Divine can genuinely support.