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Three-Candle Patterns

TL;DR. Three-candle patterns are the most complete single-structure signals in candlestick analysis. The Morning and Evening Stars are reversal patterns with built-in confirmation — the third candle confirms what the first two suggested. Three White Soldiers and Three Black Crows are continuation signals that confirm directional conviction over three periods. All are more powerful than single-candle patterns by definition.

Why three candles matter

A three-candle pattern tells a narrative across three acts:

  1. Setup — the prevailing trend continues (first candle).
  2. Uncertainty — momentum pauses, a transitional candle signals doubt (second candle).
  3. Confirmation — the new direction is established (third candle).

When all three candles align in this narrative, the signal carries far more weight than any single or two-candle formation. The uncertainty and confirmation are both present in the pattern itself.


Morning Star

Morning Star candlestick pattern

Appears: at the end of a downtrend
Signal: strong bullish reversal
Three parts:

  1. Large bearish candle (sellers in control)
  2. Small candle (any colour) that gaps down — the "star"
  3. Large bullish candle that closes above the midpoint of the first candle

The Morning Star is one of the most significant bullish reversal patterns in candlestick analysis. The name is poetic and instructive: just as the morning star (the planet Venus) appears before the sun rises, this pattern signals that daylight (a bullish trend) is coming after the dark (a downtrend).

The three acts:

Act 1 — The dark night: a large bearish candle continues the downtrend with conviction. Bears are firmly in control.

Act 2 — The turning point: a small candle gaps down from the first candle's close. This small candle — the "star" — shows that selling momentum has stalled. The bears pushed price down at the open but could not sustain the move. The star can be any colour; a Doji star is particularly significant (called the Morning Doji Star).

Act 3 — The dawn: a large bullish candle gaps up from the star and closes above the midpoint of the first candle's body. Buyers have taken decisive control. The more of the first candle's body the third candle recovers, the stronger the signal.

Ideal criteria:

  • Gap between candle 1 and candle 2 (the star should stand apart).
  • Gap between candle 2 and candle 3.
  • Third candle closes above the 50% level of candle 1's body (the more, the better).
  • Higher volume on candle 3 than candle 1 confirms the reversal.

Note on gaps in crypto: crypto markets trade 24/7, so traditional "gaps" are rare except around major events. In crypto, the "gap" in a Morning Star often manifests as: candle 2 has a very small body located clearly below candle 1's close, and candle 3 opens above candle 2's close. The principle remains valid even without a strict price gap.


Evening Star

Evening Star candlestick pattern

Appears: at the end of an uptrend
Signal: strong bearish reversal
Three parts:

  1. Large bullish candle (buyers in control)
  2. Small candle that gaps up — the "star"
  3. Large bearish candle that closes below the midpoint of the first candle

The Evening Star is the bearish counterpart to the Morning Star, with the same three-act structure in reverse. After an uptrend:

Act 1: large bullish candle confirms buyer dominance. Act 2: small star candle gaps up, showing that buying has stalled at this high. The star is often a Doji or Spinning Top. Act 3: large bearish candle reverses, closing below the midpoint of the first candle's body. Sellers have taken control.

The Evening Star is one of Nison's most highly regarded bearish patterns. In crypto scalping, it is particularly useful at all-time highs, previous resistance zones, or round numbers where buyers may have been exhausted.

Morning Doji Star / Evening Doji Star: when the middle candle is specifically a Doji, the pattern is called a Morning (or Evening) Doji Star — it carries additional weight because the Doji represents complete indecision at the turning point, before the directional resolution on candle 3.


Three White Soldiers

Three White Soldiers pattern

Signal: strong bullish continuation or reversal of a downtrend
Shape: three consecutive bullish candles, each opening within the prior candle's body and closing near its high

Three White Soldiers is a continuation pattern — or the opening phase of a new uptrend. Three successive bullish candles, each:

  • Opening within or above the previous candle's body.
  • Closing near its own high (small or no upper wick).
  • Body roughly similar in size to the others.

This is three sessions of buyer dominance with no meaningful pushback from sellers. The pattern represents sustained directional conviction, not just a single period's result.

Ideal characteristics:

  • Each candle's body is roughly similar in size — no dramatic acceleration (which can signal exhaustion rather than continuation).
  • Each close is near the high — sellers are not pushing back.
  • No large upper wicks — buyers hold their gains.

Warning — "Advance Block": if the third soldier has a noticeably smaller body or a larger upper wick than the first two, it suggests buying momentum is fading. This modified pattern (the "Advance Block") is a warning that the rally may be stalling — treat with caution rather than as a continuation signal.


Three Black Crows

Three Black Crows pattern

Signal: strong bearish continuation or reversal of an uptrend
Shape: three consecutive bearish candles, each opening within the prior candle's body and closing near its low

The mirror of Three White Soldiers. Three successive bearish candles, each opening within the prior candle's body and closing near its own low. Sellers dominant across three consecutive periods with no meaningful buyer response.

Historically, the name comes from the ominous appearance of three black (bearish) candles marching lower. In crypto, this pattern often accompanies major structural breakdowns — when support fails and selling intensifies over multiple periods.

Three Black Crows quality check:

  • Each body should be meaningful in size (small bodies indicate hesitation, not conviction).
  • Each close should be at or near the low of the period (long lower wicks reduce the pattern's strength).
  • Ideally, each open is in the middle of the previous candle (bodies overlapping).

Where three-candle patterns work best

At extremes of extended moves. A Morning Star after a 10% three-day decline is far more significant than one after a 1% dip. Three White Soldiers after a prolonged consolidation signals a genuine breakout; after a parabolic rally, it may be exhaustion in disguise.

At key structural levels. Morning Star at a major support zone, Evening Star at a previous high, Three White Soldiers above a multi-month resistance — the structural significance amplifies the candlestick signal.

With volume confirmation. In all three-candle patterns, volume matters: rising volume on the directional candles (candles 1 and 3 in Stars, all three in Soldiers/Crows) adds conviction. Volume tapering on the "star" candle in Star patterns confirms that the exhaustion phase is real.


Comparison table

PatternTypeContextKey requirement
Morning StarBullish reversalEnd of downtrend3rd candle > 50% recovery of 1st
Morning Doji StarBullish reversal (stronger)End of downtrendMiddle candle is Doji
Evening StarBearish reversalEnd of uptrend3rd candle > 50% of 1st body
Evening Doji StarBearish reversal (stronger)End of uptrendMiddle candle is Doji
Three White SoldiersBullish continuationAfter downtrend or baseThree similar-sized bull candles
Three Black CrowsBearish continuationAfter uptrendThree similar-sized bear candles

Further reading


This article is educational content, not investment advice. Trading derivatives carries substantial risk, including total loss of capital. See disclaimer.