A woman looks at charts on a four monitor trading setup.
A woman looks at charts on a four monitor trading setup.

Stage 3: Chart Patterns

Head and shoulders, flags, wedges, inside bars all taught visually, not with jargon.

Latest Articles from Stage 3: Chart Patterns

A grayscale editorial illustration of a woman with shoulder-length curly dark hair studying an Inside Bar pattern on a trading chart. She sits at her desk comparing notes, reviewing candlestick charts, and focusing on market structure rather than predicting direction. The scene emphasizes patient observation and learning to recognize Inside Bar setups before trading them.

The Inside Bar Pattern (How to Read the Market Taking a Deep Breath)

An inside bar is a two-candle pattern where the second candle's high and low are both contained within the range of the first candle. The first candle (the "mother bar") engulfs the second. This containment signals a pause, indicating he market has compressed into a tighter range after a directional move. Inside bars are used as entry triggers and as precursors to breakout moves.

Date Published:

Read Time:

5

minutes

Woman looking at chart patterns on a screen and trying to decipher them

Why Humans Keep Drawing Faces in Charts

Humans are evolutionarily optimized for pattern recognition. That’s incredibly useful when identifying threats in the wild. It becomes slightly more problematic when staring at candlestick charts at 2:00 AM convincing yourself that a vaguely triangular formation “cannot fail.” This article explores why traders start seeing patterns everywhere, the psychology behind chart recognition, and the important difference between meaningful market behavior and your brain enthusiastically connecting dots that may not actually matter.

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9

minutes

Double Top Chart Screenshot

Double Top & Double Bottom: The Market’s “One More Try” Pattern

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5

minutes

Screenshot of a chart showing an inverted head and shoulders

Head & Shoulders: The Chart Pattern Everyone Learns First

Most traders learn the Head & Shoulders pattern as a shape to memorize. But underneath the strange name and mountain-like structure is something much more important: momentum exhaustion. This article breaks down the psychology behind the pattern, why traders watch it, and how to stop seeing chart patterns as magic drawings and start seeing them as behavior stories.

Date Published:

Read Time:

10

minutes

Two charts side by side. On the left is an ascending triangle with a flat top and rising bottom and you can see the breakout up. On the right a descending triangle with a falling top and a flat bottom. You can see the breakout price dropping.

Ascending vs Descending Triangles

One boundary holds, the other moves, and the side that is moving is the side showing increasing urgency. That moving side is where the lean comes from.

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5

minutes

a chart with a triangle, double top and double bottom pattern overlaid on it

What Even Counts as a Chart Pattern?

A chart pattern is a recurring shape, but it only counts when the shape reflects a real behavioral situation. The name is shorthand. The behavior is the subject.

Date Published:

Read Time:

5

minutes

woman in front of four monitors with four different charts with chart patterns drawn on them

Why Chart Patterns Work (When They Do)

Chart patterns work when the behavior they describe is genuinely present and enough traders act on it. Treating them as probabilities, not promises, is the whole skill.

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Read Time:

5

minutes

Read My Stories

A grayscale editorial illustration of a woman with shoulder-length curly dark hair beginning her first week of paper trading. She studies live charts, writes notes in a trading journal, and practices using a simulated trading platform while following a simple week-one plan. The scene emphasizes learning the platform and building confidence before risking real money.

Your first week in a trading platform is genuinely disorienting. Prices move in ways that don't match what you read. Decisions that seem obvious in hindsight aren't obvious in real time. This is completely normal . Here's what to actually expect, so you can make the most of the learning curve rather than fighting it.

Updated on Jul 8, 2026

A grayscale editorial illustration of a woman with shoulder-length curly dark hair studying an Inside Bar pattern on a trading chart. She sits at her desk comparing notes, reviewing candlestick charts, and focusing on market structure rather than predicting direction. The scene emphasizes patient observation and learning to recognize Inside Bar setups before trading them.

An inside bar is a two-candle pattern where the second candle's high and low are both contained within the range of the first candle. The first candle (the "mother bar") engulfs the second. This containment signals a pause, indicating he market has compressed into a tighter range after a directional move. Inside bars are used as entry triggers and as precursors to breakout moves.

Updated on Jul 7, 2026

A grayscale editorial illustration of a woman with shoulder-length curly dark hair thoughtfully evaluating trading information at her desk. A laptop displays a polished trading advertisement while notebooks, charts, and a quality assurance checklist emphasize verifying evidence before risking capital. The scene reinforces the importance of auditing trading claims instead of trusting marketing.

The internet delivers confident trading knowledge at industrial scale. Most of it is untested, some of it actively harmful. Developing the ability to evaluate what you're being taught, and what you think you've learned, is one of the most useful meta-skills in trading.

Updated on Jul 4, 2026

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