I've been oggling at the Rolla Nordic deck for some time now. For me, it has that nice 70s retro vintage ish feel. Love the patterns too. Too bad there isn't a colored version.
Albideuter can be such an enabler. I've begun to warm up to the Nostradamus/Centuries deck and its fuzzy almost folk-artsy look. Gotta love that Knight of Swords:
http://www.albideuter.de/html/nostradamus_40.html Looks like the basis for that old cartoon series Biker Mice from Mars. (which begs the pun Biker Mice from Marseille)
As for what constitute a Marseille deck... well I'm certainly no expert, but I'd like to think that, at the core, it involves a certain consistency with characteristics and features of, shall we say, an "ideal" (in that Platonic "eidos" sense) Marseille. It's also different strokes for different folks - some have very narrow definitions as to which qualifies, and some have a wider scope. I personally think of the matter in the following levels:
Level 1 - at its narrowest: only the actual historical decks.
Level 2 - scanned facsimilies printed as is (with maybe a retouch here and there).
Level 3 - reproductions created by artists who have the goal of remaining faithful to the details of the original basis (like the form of the line art, colors, etc), with some leeway in terms of artistic interpretation (for example, how s/he will present a detail which looks vague in the original card).
Level 4 - decks created by artists who were inspired by the Tarot de Marseille but who also wanted to make artistic changes to their own decks. This last one has a broad range - some retain a lot of the Marseille look, with the artist's own personal style added, and then there are others which departed very far from the original inspiration.
A friend calls decks in the latter two "Neo-Marseille", though maybe that term would be more apt for Level 3, and "Marseille-Inspired" for those in Level 4.
-Ly