The Fin de Siecle Kipper is a set of German divination cards illustrated in Victorian style by veteran tarot artist, Ciro Marchetti. A Kipper deck is similar to Lenormand, but focuses more on people than events in its cards. This set has 39 cards: the 36 standard for a Kipper deck, plus three new additions.
It is a positive card that is very time-related. The living room is an enclosure or room of our house where we make more life and that is always comfortable. In that sense, the presence of the Living Room in a print may indicate enjoyment of our private life and joy. It also tells us that we care enough to enjoy free time to be with our friends, partner or family.
Depending on the cards that accompany you could be a message not to stay confined between four walls and go out further to have fun and interact with the rest of mortals. At work, it indicates some comfort and even a certain degree of monotony and routine. The same can happen in love.
Kipper decks, like their French counterpart the Lenormand deck, generally has 36 cards. However the Kipper deck, unlike the Lenormand deck, is primarily focused on people rather than objects and events. Each card has a number which simply lists it order in the deck, and a title which hints at the meaning of the illustration. Again, the Kipper deck differs from the Lenormand deck in that it doesn't have a lot of extraneous symbolism and correspondences printed alongside the central illustration.
However the Kipper cards are generally read in pairs, and otherwise adhere to most Lenormand conventions and layouts. Heavy emphasis is placed on the direction the characters in the cards are facing, or where the action is directed. Articles of mis en scene are important to a reading, and the placement of cards in relation to a significator is very important.