Shooting Star, Doji, Abandoned Baby [Updated April 2026]
Candlestick patterns can have some crazy names sometimes. Stars, dojis, and abandoned babies? The Japanese were fond of naming candlestick patterns after real-life visual representations. Shooting stars, morning stars, evening stars and abandoned babies are all examples of indecision reversal candle patterns. We’ll introduce you to them in this post.
If you haven’t checked out our complete explanation of candlestick patterns, be sure to do so. In it, we cover the construction of a candlestick chart, the history of candlesticks, and common candlestick reversal patterns. It also has a link to a free cheat sheet that includes the stars, dojis, and baby patterns.
What are Candlestick Stars?
As noted above, stars are a type of indecision candle. Typically we want to trade them as a powerful reversal pattern. But as with all candlestick patterns, context is everything.
Types of Candlestick Stars
The key rule to a star is that its real body does not overlap the previous candles real body. There are several variations of the star pattern:
- morning star
- evening star
- doji star
- shooting star
The Body
Stars will typically have a small body. This is particularly important for psychological reasons which we’ll get into in a moment. But for now, suffice it to say that stars usually open and close very tightly.

Of course, these candles can appear anywhere on a chart. With the examples below, we’ll teach you the proper context where they should appear for profitable reversal patterns.
Exhaustion Gaps

On a daily chart, the Candlestick Stars will typically appear with a gap at the highs of an extended run, or the lows of an extended sell-off. This is the key to the reversal patterns
Candlestick Stars will typically be associated with increased volume at these climactic ends as well. This also is part of the psychology of the pattern.
Psychology of the Candlestick Star Pattern
As a star has a small real body, it represents indecision by bulls and bears.
How so?
Think about it this way:
When a stock is trending upward aggressively, strong hands and institutions will be selling into that strength. Meanwhile, retail traders may be buying here unaware that the stock is about to turn.
Likewise, because the stock is so extended, short sellers will be initiating their positions as well, adding more supply to the stock.
As all of this occurs at once, we get a star candle that can’t seem to make up its mind on moving higher or lower. A lot of activity, but not much movement in either direction. That is, until the next candle.
While the primary trend is still intact, the presence of the star is the first sign that the trend could turn. Think of it like a crossroads.
It is the second candle that will tell us whether the reversal pattern is confirmed or not.
Candlestick Star Variations
Morning Star

The morning star candle is a bottom reversal signal that comes after an extended downtrend.
This pattern is a three candle reversal setup. The first two bars are the typical star setup discussed above. The major difference with this pattern is the third candle in the formation.
It is a very strong green candle, which does not have to be a gap and closes at least halfway into the first candle.
Assessing the Strength of the Morning Star Signal
The further the green reversal candle closes into the first bar (the red bar preceding the star), the more bullish the formation.
On that note, outside of the morning star candlestick pattern revealing itself, look for other indications that this pattern is confirming. For example, you want to see high volume in the third candle, indicating strength.
Additionally, the morning star works very well when it occurs at previous support levels. The more criteria you can find, the better.
On the other side of the coin, if you buy a stock that prints the morning star, be prepared for some sort of pullback.
It is not uncommon for that to happen nearly 50% of the time. If there is a violation of the lows, then the morning star is failed.
Let’s take a look at the morning star candlestick at work with a live trading example.
Morning Star Trading Example

This is a beautiful morning star setup.
First of all, the morning star came in at previous support near the 60.37 level. The star candle came in the form of a hammer.
Refer back to our Candlestick Guide to learn more about the hammer.
There was high volume that came along with the hammer, and this was an even bigger sign that this level would hold as support. The following day, the stock accelerated with a gap higher and closed well into the top half of the first bar.
As mentioned earlier, the presence of this pattern does not indicate an immediate rally. As you can see, the gap created from the second to the third bar was backfilled.
Smaller gaps, such as this one, tend to fill in the short term. Even if one had waited for the high of the third candle in morning star to be broken above, five points could have been made in that short amount of time.
Evening Star
The evening star candlestick is the bearish version of the morning star.

It is a top reversal pattern that occurs after a sustained uptrend. The evening star is also a three candle pattern.
Evening Star Formation
The first candle is a strong bullish candle. The second candle is the star, and the third is a red body that closes well into the first candle.
Again, as with the bullish morning star, the third candle in the evening star does not have to be a gap.
Here are a couple of factors that increase the chances of this pattern succeeding:
- The real bodies of all three candles do not overlap
- The third candle closes well into the first one; preferably regaining 75% of the candle
- Volume should lighten up on the first candle and increase on the third.
Just as the lows of the morning star pattern provide support, the highs of the evening star candle formation serve as resistance to any further upside movement.
Doji Stars
A candlestick doji pattern is a candle that lacks a real body. This means the open and close of the bar are essentially the same. It has a strong significance after substantial advances or declines.
The lack of direction is a potent reversal signal, especially if it is followed by a candle in the anticipated direction, and at the end of a trend.
When a doji is the star within the morning star and evening star candlestick patterns, the formations are known as the morning doji star and evening doji stars.

Notice, the Evening Doji star image above is an abandoned baby top, while the morning doji star is not. We’ll explain why below.
Abandoned Baby Candle
Another extremely powerful version of the doji star is the abandon baby top or abandon baby bottom. This pattern is the equivalent to what some know as the island reversal.

The abandoned baby candlestick has a doji as the second candle with a gap on both sides.
If you think about the psychology of this setup, the first gap came in an exhaustive fashion.
The stock was already in a strong uptrend or downtrend, and then it made a gap which closed near its open. This was the first sign that the directional pressure was fading.
Now, with the third candle gapping in the opposite direction of the trend, we have confirmation that a more significant trend reversal has taken place.
The Shooting Star

The final star variation we will discuss is the shooting star, which occurs after a strong uptrend (or the inverted hammer that occurs after a strong move down).
The shooting star has a long upper shadow with a small real body at the lower end of the candle. This pattern usually presents itself as a sign of a short term correction rather than a more potent reversal signal.
Along those lines, it is telling us that the market’s rally could not be sustained. The market opened at or near its lows, shot up much higher and then reversed to close near the open.
The Body
Ideally, the real body of the shooting star should gap away from the previous candles’ real body. While it is not necessary, it adds confirmation to the validity of the impending reversal.
Why? Again, it all has to do with exhaustion in either direction.
Additionally, take a look at the previous candles; many times you will see overhead shadows on those candles as well. This indicates that the stock is struggling to go higher; just another clue as to what might happen.
When a shooting star forms near a resistance level, a very powerful resistance level is created.
As mentioned before, the shooting star is a short term topping formation, and any break above the high of this candle is a failed confirmation.
Variations

There is one variation to the shooting star you should consider; it is known as the gravestone doji. The gravestone doji is a shooting star with virtually no real body, the open and close are exactly the same.
This formation is more powerful than the typical shooting star and portends a more serious reversal.
Summary
Candlestick patterns are a great way to assess the trend of a stock. The key to its secret is the fact that candlesticks are a visual representation of price action.
These reversal candles can help the astute trader anticipate a trend change or continuation. Just remember, you need other validation points. These can come in the form of a technical indicator or other chart patterns.
How Can Tradingsim Help?
You can use Tradingsim to scan the markets and locate these candle reversal patterns. You can then apply your own trading strategy to find the optimum setups for profits.
Work on developing your own specific rules for entries, stops, and targets.
As always, be sure to ask yourself the following questions when practicing any setup:
- what qualities work for each particular setup
- what criteria were met, or not met
- how was volume associated with the pattern
- where could you have set your risk and profit target
- how many of your trades worked or didn’t work
Quick Answer: What Do Shooting Star, Doji, and Abandoned Baby Candlesticks Signal?
Shooting stars, dojis, morning and evening stars, and abandoned babies are high-probability reversal candlestick patterns that signal indecision or exhaustion at swing highs and swing lows. Each pattern has a specific structure, a specific location requirement, and a specific confirmation rule. The pattern alone is never enough — the signal comes from the combination of the candle shape, the level it prints at, and the volume that accompanies it.
Reversal Candlestick Cheat Sheet
| Pattern | Signal | Where It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Shooting Star | Bearish reversal — long upper wick, small real body | At resistance after an uptrend |
| Doji | Indecision — open and close nearly equal | At key support, resistance, or after extended move |
| Morning Star | Bullish reversal — 3-bar down, small body, strong up | At swing low after downtrend |
| Evening Star | Bearish reversal — 3-bar up, small body, strong down | At swing high after uptrend |
| Abandoned Baby | Strong reversal — gap isolated doji | At exhaustion extremes, with volume |
| Hammer | Bullish reversal — long lower wick, small body | At swing low, support |
The Three Confirmation Rules That Separate Signal From Noise
- Location. A reversal candle only matters at a level. A shooting star in the middle of a range means nothing; a shooting star at a prior daily high is a signal.
- Volume. The reversal candle should print on expanding volume. Low-volume dojis and stars are weak and fail frequently.
- Follow-through. Wait for the next bar to confirm. A shooting star is only tradable when the following bar breaks its low. Traders who enter on the candle itself take too many false signals.
Entry, Stop, and Target Rules
- Entry: Break of the prior bar’s low (for bearish reversals) or high (for bullish reversals).
- Stop: Just beyond the reversal candle’s opposite extreme (above the shooting star’s high, below the hammer’s low).
- Target 1: Nearest prior swing high or low.
- Target 2: Measured move equal to the prior trend leg.
Rehearse Reversal Candlesticks in the TradingSim Simulator
Reading candlesticks from static charts is one thing; trading them in live tape with slippage, spread, and emotional pressure is another. In the TradingSim simulator, you can replay archived market sessions bar-by-bar and rehearse reversal entries without risking capital. Our candlestick patterns guide covers the full library, and the 3-bar play article walks through one of the highest-probability 3-candle patterns.
Seven-Session Reversal Drill
- Session 1 — Identify. Replay a trend day and mark every doji, shooting star, morning star, and evening star on a 5-minute chart.
- Session 2 — Filter. Keep only the candles that printed at a clear level (prior high, prior low, VWAP, moving average).
- Session 3 — Volume check. Of the filtered set, mark which ones printed on above-average volume.
- Sessions 4-6 — Paper trade. Take only the candles that pass both the level and volume filters. Enter on the break of the candle extreme. Log every trade.
- Session 7 — Review. Tally hit rate and R multiple. Drop the ones that lost money. Keep the ones that didn’t.
Frequently Asked Questions About Reversal Candlesticks
How reliable is a doji as a reversal signal?
A doji by itself is a weak signal. Its reliability jumps substantially when it prints at a clear level (support, resistance, prior swing high or low) with above-average volume. The follow-through bar is what actually triggers the trade — the doji is just the setup.
What’s the difference between a shooting star and a hanging man?
Both have long upper or lower wicks and small real bodies, but they appear at different points in a trend. A shooting star has a long upper wick and appears at a swing high after an uptrend (bearish signal). A hanging man has a long lower wick and appears at a swing high after an uptrend (also bearish, but from a different structure).
Is an abandoned baby a real pattern?
Yes — but it’s rare. An abandoned baby is a doji isolated by gaps on both sides, making it visually “abandoned” at an extreme. Because intraday markets rarely gap, abandoned babies are much more common on daily charts than on 5-minute charts.
Should I trade every morning star or evening star I see?
No. Morning stars and evening stars that print at a level (prior daily low, prior daily high, a major moving average, or VWAP) on above-average volume are high-probability. The same pattern in the middle of a range is much lower probability.
Do reversal candlesticks work on futures?
Yes — they work on any liquid instrument. The same rules apply: location, volume, follow-through. Practice them on E-mini S&P, Nasdaq, and crude oil futures in the TradingSim futures simulator, where you can replay real archived sessions at full tick speed.