A joke and a link, hopefully helpful
jdev said:
You hush, blasphemer.
She's dead as hell and doesn't give a rat's patootie if I call her Bob.
Bob's yer uncle. Pixie sometimes feels like "Auntie Colman" (no e) to me, some days when I look at her images in a merry mood...and Ms. Colman-Smith sometimes when I look at the art of her cards with thoughtfulness of the art of cartomancy and the "golden age" of story illustrations at that time... and I think of Lady Frieda as my sacred geometry teacher (smiles).
I'd take the Thoth deck as a slow sip sometimes, a dip into a different pool of imagery at different times. But then, I like to rove the tarot centuries in different ways, returning to different card families (like twentieth and twenti-first century Thoth deck styles/thinkers) at different seasons.
The way the Thoth court cards are named by A.C. and painted by Frieda Harris, are stunning mythical characters to me. The titles such as "Queen of the Thrones of Air" sometimes re-interpreted--say through the Via Path of Life Tarot--I just find the characters compelling. Some may think they are to sci-fi/fantasy, but really like the distinct descriptions...
http://hermetic.com/crowley/book-of-thoth/court-cards.html
Hope the links available on the net help you find the study you need. The link shows some small motifs that would be helpful to compare. One thing that I like about some texts that describe Thoth cards is how they group the same numbered cards from the different suits together so I can study the differences, such as four aces, four queens, etc. It's somehow a really interesting feel to me, when one studies the different images and texts on different decks, how the 'feel' of the how the cards are grouped show me something different. I cannot describe this more specifically, but it's just my small take on learning different families of decks.
Best wishes,
Cerulean