I think the first was the Wonderland Tarot, by now available in a tin. (It's the only one of the three that I own, and I love it).
I really like this graphic style.The delightful artwork by Morgana Abbey pays homage to the hand-drawn Victorian style of Sir John Tenniel, illustrator of the first edition of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
In some cards, the RWS tradition is hinted at, in others, it's followed very closely.
One might argue that Colman-Smith is one of Tenniel's heirs - the glorious tradition of British illustrators and graphic artists. That makes this deck visually so appealing to me, it feels somehow authentic - as if Lewis Carroll might have imagined a tarot deck to look and feel like.
The Baba Studio Alice in Wonderland deck is sold out and looks very beautiful.
The photography-based computer graphics compare to the linear drawings of the earlier deck like a live-action movie to the original drawings. You can really get lost in this world, it seems so accessible... but sadly it isn't, at least not for me. Does anyone have this deck? How does it read? How do the worlds of Wonderland and tarot meet?
(An in-depth review with great pictures can be found here)
The newest version, Tarot in Wonderland by Barbara Moore and Eugene Smith, is another computer graphic deck, but in a different style from the Baba deck. I'm totally intrigued by it and I'm sure Barbara Moore's book is worth reading. She's such good tarot writer, knowledgeable and warm and always interesting.
I'd love to compare how these three different decks approach Wonderland and how they use the different symbols. Which figures appear as majors, which scenes as minors, how the symbols and the cards themselves appear...
Does anyone have more than one of these decks? I guess the new deck will be one of my purchases in the future... what a pity the Baba deck won't be available again!