also appears in an illuminated copy of the
Gutenberg Bible. This is a "multiple-plate card", where each animal is on a separate small
copper plate, several of which are reused on other cards. There are similar repetitions in many other manuscripts and other works of art, mostly but not all German. The cards have typical
suits for Northern European cards of the period:
flowers, birds, deer, beasts of prey, and
wild men – so five suits in total. Each symbol (or "
pip") on a card is different, so the quantity and difficulty of the engraving is far greater than found in a modern set of cards (and, equally, rapid play must have been very difficult as there are no numbers depicted on the cards). Engraved sets of cards are few; they must have been much more expensive than those made in
woodcut, which can be printed in much greater numbers before the matrix wears out. Interestingly and unusually, some of the cards are composed of different little plates, one per pip, which were presumably held together in a frame for printing. Possibly the Master was in Mainz and was influenced by
Johannes Gutenberg's
movable type. Despite the very few impressions surviving, some cards exist in two
states, and some in different versions, all catalogued by
Max Lehrs. ==Place in printmaking==