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The deck linked by @Glorfindel is for French playing cards. Here's a link to poker playing cards, in PNG or SVG format. Poker cards are wider than French ones. This design is used by many decks, e.g. Bicycle Playing Cards, and will typically be the one you see in movies or at the casino. A full set of poker playing cards created using vector ...
These were published in the early 20th century. This site has The Pictorial Key to the Tarot that contains B/W images of the Tarot cards (clicking those opens fair quality scans in color). The book and the images predate U.S. copyright laws. These images here are the best high quality scans I have found of these old images.
I recently had a deck of custom cards printed at MakePlayingCards. They accept bmp,png,tiff and jpg images at a minimum resolution of 300 DPI. I have a bunch of SVG vector images that I can convert to whatever DPI I need, but I thought 4 times the minimum would be more than enough, and used 1200 DPI png images.
The materials to print cards are simple: Cardstock. 3 forms of cardstock are available readily: letter sized or A4 sized (depending on location in the world) cardstock, usually in 50, 250, or 500 sheet packages. Index cards. Business Card stock - usually in 10 sheet packs or 100 sheet packs.
Expansion packs 1-4 each include blank cards - 8 white cards and 4 black cards. The Bigger Blacker Box expansion (and box) contains 50 blank cards (10 black and 40 white). These blanks printed using the exact same process as all the other CAH cards, so they're virtually indistinguishable from the official cards.
What i would like is something like: 1) make a .psd with labels for name and defense values (also background and other images that can be anything) 2) have some file that lists all the monsters names and defense values (where i can quicly change them and regenerate images from that)
I've added to my answer. At the bottom of an individual card's page on magiccards.info, there are a handful of links under the heading "Print Proxies". Clicking the +1 through +4 links will build up a page of proxies to print, while View/Clear does exactly what you'd expect.
You lay out 52 cards (1 deck), dealt four up, four down. You get 8 piles: on the left, four face-up (arranged so you can see all of them). on the right, face downward except for the top card on each which is face-up. This makes 7 cards per pile on the left and 6 per pile on the right. To play, you stack cards on top of each other according to ...
If you are trying to create custom cards, you might want to check out magicseteditor.sourceforge.net also there used to be an MTG symbols font floating around (which could be used to get the vectors) but it seems to have disappeared from the 'net. Still looking for a place to download it.
If your strategy necessitates large mana requirements (e.g. if the average mana cost of the non-land cards you want to play is 2.9), then you need to play more mana sources (e.g. 26 lands instead of 24/25 lands), and then your mana curve should be adjusted to be an ideal fit for a 26-land deck (e.g. 4x 1-mana cards, 11x 2-mana cards, 7x 3-mana ...