Evening Star

The Evening Star is the exact opposite of the morning star. The evening star, the planet Venus, occurs just before the darkness sets in. The evening star is found at the end of the uptrend.
Morning Star

The Morning Star is a bottom reversal signal. Like the morning star, the planet Mercury, it foretells the sunrise, or the rising prices. The pattern consists of a three day signal.
Hammer, Hanging-man

Hammer and Hanging-man are candlesticks with long lower shadows and small real bodies. The bodies are at the top of the trading session. This pattern at the bottom of the down-trend is called a Hammer. It is hammering out a base. The Japanese word is takuri, meaning “trying to gauge the depth”.
Piercing Pattern

The Piercing Pattern is a bottom reversal. It is a two candle pattern at the end of a declining market. The first day real body is black. The second day is a long white body. The white day opens sharply lower, under the trading range of the previous day. The price comes up to where it closes above the 50% level of the black body.
Dark Cloud Cover

The Dark Cloud Cover is a two-day bearish pattern found at the end of an upturn or at the top of a congested trading area. The first day of the pattern is a strong white real body. The second day’s price opens higher than any of the previous day’s trading range.
Bearish Engulfing Pattern

The Bearish Engulfing Pattern is directly opposite to the bullish pattern. It is created at the end of an up-trending market. The black real body completely engulfs the previous day’s white body. This shows that the bears are now overwhelming the bulls.
Bullish Engulfing Pattern

The Bullish Engulfing Pattern is formed at the end of a downtrend. A white body is formed that opens lower and closes higher than the black candle open and close from the previous day. This complete engulfing of the previous day’s body represents overwhelming buying pressure dissipating the selling pressure.
Long-legged Doji

The Long-legged Doji has one or two very long shadows. Long-legged Doji’s are often signs of market tops. If the open and the close are in the center of the session’s trading range, the signal is referred to as a Rickshaw Man. The Japanese believe these signals to mean that the trend has “lost it’s sense of direction.”
Gravestone Doji
The Gravestone Doji is formed when the open and the close occur at theĀ low of the day. It is found occasionally at market bottoms, but it’s forte is calling market tops. The name, Gravestone Doji, is derived by the formation of the signal looking like a gravestone.
Doji

A Doji is formed when the open and the close are the same or very close. The length of the shadows are not important. The Japanese interpretation is that the bulls and the bears are conflicting. The appearance of a Doji should alert the investor of major indecision.