Pretty Profitable · Price Action Library

Advanced Reversal
Sequences

Multi-Candle Reversal Patterns · How Structure Flips at a Zone
Before We Start

One candle is a clue. A sequence is a confirmation.

A hammer on its own is a heads-up. But when you watch two or three candles work together to flip the order flow, you are watching buyers and sellers actually trade hands. That is what these patterns show you.

Read every pattern the same way

None of these matter floating in the middle of nowhere. A reversal sequence only earns your attention when it forms at a level that already matters — a fresh supply or demand zone, a clean break of structure, a fair value gap that needs filling.

The pattern is not the trade. The location is the trade. The pattern is just the market raising its hand to tell you the zone is doing its job. Pattern plus location plus market structure. That is the whole game.

As you read each one, ask: where did the body close, who lost control, and did the next candle agree?

One more thing: these patterns are timeframe agnostic. A bullish engulfing means the same thing on a 1-minute chart as it does on a daily, the only difference is how much weight you give it. A pattern on a higher timeframe carries more significance, but the way you read the candles never changes.

Pink candle = bullish (close above open)
Black candle = bearish (close below open)
Two-Candle Reversal

Bullish Engulfing

The cleanest two-candle bottom there is. Sellers had control, then one buyer candle swallows the whole prior candle and takes it back.

01

Bullish Engulfing

2 candles · at demand
Bullish Reversal
DEMAND
Pink body engulfs the black body entirely

The buyers didn't just show up. They erased an entire candle of selling in one move.

The Sequence
  1. A bearish (black) candle prints — sellers still look in control.
  2. The next candle opens at or below the prior close, then rips up.
  3. It closes above the prior candle's open — the pink body fully covers the black one.
What It Tells You

Every seller who entered on that black candle is now underwater. The pink candle didn't just stop the drop, it absorbed all of it and pushed past. That is a real transfer of control to buyers.

Make It Count

The bigger the engulfing body relative to the candle it swallows, the stronger the signal. A pink body that engulfs two or three prior candles is even louder.

Two-Candle Reversal

Bearish Engulfing

The mirror image at the top. Buyers had the wheel, then one seller candle swallows the prior candle whole and snatches control back.

02

Bearish Engulfing

2 candles · at supply
Bearish Reversal
SUPPLY
Black body engulfs the pink body entirely

Buyers stepped up, sellers stepped harder. One black candle eats the whole green push.

The Sequence
  1. A bullish (pink) candle prints — buyers look fine.
  2. Next candle opens at or above the prior close, then sells off hard.
  3. It closes below the prior candle's open — black body fully covers the pink one.
What It Tells You

Everyone who bought that pink candle is now trapped in red. Sellers didn't just defend, they reversed the entire prior candle's progress. Control flipped to the downside.

Make It Count

Best when it forms right into a supply zone or at the top of an extended run. Context turns a decent engulf into an A-plus short.

Three-Candle Reversal

Morning Star

A three-candle bottom that shows the fight, the pause, and the takeover. Sellers, then indecision, then buyers reclaim the move.

03

Morning Star

3 candles · at demand
Bullish Reversal
DEMAND
Big black · small star at the low · big pink

The selling exhausts, the market holds its breath, then buyers decide they're done going lower.

The Sequence
  1. A strong bearish candle — the downtrend looks healthy.
  2. A small-bodied candle (a doji or spinning top) that gaps or pushes lower then stalls. This is the "star" — indecision at the bottom.
  3. A strong bullish candle that closes well into the body of the first black candle.
What It Tells You

The small middle candle is the tell. Selling momentum ran out of fuel right at the lows. When the third pink candle comes in strong, it confirms buyers waited for sellers to exhaust, then took over.

Make It Count

The deeper that third pink candle closes into the first black body, the more convincing the reversal. A close past the halfway point is the standard.

Three-Candle Reversal

Evening Star

The top-of-the-move mirror of the morning star. Buyers run, they stall, then sellers take the trend away.

04

Evening Star

3 candles · at supply
Bearish Reversal
SUPPLY
Big pink · small star at the high · big black

The rally tops out, hesitates at the highs, then sellers come in and take the whole thing back.

The Sequence
  1. A strong bullish candle — the uptrend looks strong.
  2. A small-bodied star at the highs showing buyers ran out of room.
  3. A strong bearish candle that closes deep into the first pink body.
What It Tells You

Buyers pushed into the highs and got stuck. That little star is the moment the rally lost its legs. The third black candle confirms sellers stepped in while buyers were stalled.

Make It Count

Pairs beautifully with a fresh supply zone or a failed break of a prior high. Star at resistance plus strong follow-through equals a clean short setup.

Two-Candle Reversal

Tweezer Bottom

Two candles that test the exact same low and both get rejected. The market tried twice and failed twice — that floor is real.

05

Tweezer Bottom

2 candles · at demand
Bullish Reversal
DEMAND matched low
Two wicks reject the identical low

Price reached down to the same exact level twice, and twice the buyers slapped it back up.

The Sequence
  1. A candle pushes down and prints a low, often closing weak.
  2. The next candle revisits that same low (the wicks line up like tweezers).
  3. Both candles fail to close lower — the second usually closes bullish.
What It Tells You

The matched low is a level buyers are actively defending. Sellers tried to break it on two separate candles and could not. The more precisely the wicks match, the more deliberate the defense.

Make It Count

A tweezer bottom sitting on a fresh demand zone is a double-defended level. The candle pattern and the zone are telling you the same thing.

Two-Candle Reversal

Tweezer Top

Two candles testing the same high and both getting rejected. The ceiling held twice — buyers couldn't break through.

06

Tweezer Top

2 candles · at supply
Bearish Reversal
SUPPLY matched high
Two wicks reject the identical high

Price reached up to the same level twice, and twice the sellers smacked it down.

The Sequence
  1. A candle pushes up and prints a high.
  2. The next candle tests that same high — upper wicks line up.
  3. Both fail to close higher — the second usually closes bearish.
What It Tells You

That matched high is a level sellers are guarding. Buyers tried to break it twice and got rejected both times. The ceiling is proven, not assumed.

Make It Count

Strongest at a fresh supply zone or a prior swing high. A double rejection at a level that already matters is your green light to look short.

Single-Candle Signal

Rejection Candle

The workhorse. One candle with a long wick that shows price went somewhere, got refused, and came right back. The single most important candle to read at a zone.

07

Rejection Candle

1 candle · at any level that matters
Reversal Signal
DEMAND SUPPLY bullish bearish
Long wick = the direction price was refused

The wick is the story. It marks the exact price the market tried, hated, and abandoned.

How To Read The Wick

The long wick always points to the rejected side. A long lower wick means price dropped, buyers refused it, and pushed back up — bullish. A long upper wick means price rallied, sellers refused it, and pushed back down — bearish.

What Makes It Valid
  1. The wick is clearly longer than the body — ideally at least twice the body length.
  2. The body closes back on the side it came from, near the opposite end of the wick.
  3. It happens at a level that matters, not in open space.
Make It Count

A rejection wick poking into a supply or demand zone and snapping back is the bread and butter of price action. The longer the wick relative to the body, the harder the refusal.

Three-Candle Reversal

Three White Soldiers

Not a single turn but a confirmed shift to the upside. Three strong pink candles in a row, each building on the last, telling you buyers have taken over for real.

08

Three White Soldiers

3 candles · bottom reversal
Bullish Reversal
DEMAND three soldiers
Three strong pink closes, each higher

One strong candle can be noise. Three pink candles in a row, each closing higher, is a trend.

The Sequence
  1. A pink candle prints after a downtrend, closing strong.
  2. A second pink candle opens within the prior body and closes higher.
  3. A third pink candle does the same, each with small upper wicks.
What It Tells You

Buyers are in firm, sustained control after the downtrend. This is not a single candle defending a level, it is three candles in a row of buyers refusing to give ground. The small upper wicks mean sellers barely showed up.

Make It Count

Watch for tiny wicks. Long upper wicks mean sellers are fighting back, which weakens the pattern. Clean bodies equal clean control.

Three-Candle Reversal

Three Black Crows

The bearish mirror of the soldiers. Three strong black candles stepping lower, each closing below the last, telling you sellers have taken the trend away from buyers.

09

Three Black Crows

3 candles · top reversal
Bearish Reversal
SUPPLY three crows
Three strong black closes, each lower

The same story flipped. Three black candles in a row, each closing lower, is a downtrend taking hold.

The Sequence
  1. A black candle prints after an uptrend, closing weak.
  2. A second black candle opens within the prior body and closes lower.
  3. A third black candle does the same, each with small lower wicks.
What It Tells You

Sellers have taken over and are not letting up after the uptrend. Three lower closes in a row is a real handoff of control, not a one-candle wobble. Small lower wicks mean buyers could barely push back.

Make It Count

Watch for tiny wicks. Long lower wicks mean buyers are fighting back, which weakens the pattern. Clean bodies equal clean control.

Play With It

Where You'd Enter, Where Your Stop Goes

Click through each pattern to see the candles drawn on a price axis with your entry and your stop loss marked, plus the reasoning behind each placement.

Entry
Stop Loss
Before You Click The Button

The Reversal Confirmation Checklist

Run every reversal sequence through this before you treat it as a signal. If it doesn't clear the list, it's a chart pattern, not a trade.

Five questions, every time

1
Is it at a level that matters? Supply, demand, a swing high or low, or a clean break of structure. Not floating in the middle of the range.
2
Where did the body close? The close is the decision. A strong close in the reversal direction is the whole point of the pattern.
3
Who lost control? Name the side that got trapped. If you can't point to trapped traders, the reversal story is weak.
4
Did the next candle agree? Confirmation matters. A follow-through candle in the same direction turns a maybe into a yes.
5
Does structure support it? A bullish reversal into a downtrend with no break of structure yet is early. Let the structure agree with the candles.