Clones can be problematic
Nytebugg said:
I had to read your post twice to realize you said it was bottom left. seems more like a queen of wands to me than the world.
I agree. When I looked at that card, I thought she was Queen/Wands or some other Wand card.
Lunatic, although the Lunatic deck is a lovely deck, there's always a problem when a new reader learns tarot from a modified clone. What I mean by this is that while some of the images correspond to the Rider-Waite symbolism, the artist has taken liberties with others. Riffed on them, or forgotten about them entirely. As you do not know the source material, it may be harder for you to figure out what the artist had in mind when they went the way they went.
It's much easier to go from the source deck (learn Rider-Waite) into clones than backwards (from clone to source). That said, it's certainly not impossible to start with a clone. Let's take your World card, for example. In the Rider-Waite, the world is a dancer in a Yoni shape. This indicates the cycle of birth and death, of orbits and spinning, of knowing all the steps. Thus, a card of wisdom, completion, travel, etc. It is a cosmic dancer.
The artist for your World Card has a woman settled on the grass with hints of "forest" garb like the animal-pelt cap. In RW, the dancer holds TWO batons, symbolizing balance, wands of creation (related to the magician's wand of creation), etc. But your lady in the grass only has one. It looks to me like the artist decided that the World Cup should be a Shaman/Earth Mother avatar. More connected to Planet Earth as grass, animal, female, nature then cosmic dancer.
This still relates nicely to being able to travel (single staff as walking staff) and be at home anywhere. I'm not sure she connects as well to the completion/graduation/cycles feel of the dancer. The dancer speaks of cycles, while this World card speaks of rest. Completion leads to rest rather than to a new cycle. But there you go.
As you see, she's easier to figure out (or so I think) if you know something of the source card on which she's based and what that was all about.