Beyond the ten classical planets, a chart is anchored by a few other points worth reading.
Ascendant (ASC) — the sign rising on the eastern horizon at birth. It shapes outward manner. On the wheel, the horizontal axis is the Ascendant / Descendant axis. If birth time is unknown, this won't appear.
Midheaven (MC) — the highest point in the sky at birth. It points to vocation and public self. On the wheel, the vertical axis is the MC / IC axis. If birth time is unknown, this won't appear.
Chiron — a small body that moves between Saturn and Uranus, read as a sign of where lessons live.
North Node — not a body but a mathematical point of the Moon's orbit. It marks the direction of growth.
North Node in Leo10° 39′℞
Chiron in Scorpio29° 38′
Your chart next
The sky at your birth.
Drawn freely, read at your own pace. And if you want a closer study, the report walks through every planet and pattern in your sky.
Aspects are the angles between two planets — the geometric relationships that shape how those planets talk to each other in a chart. A conjunction fuses them; an opposition sets them at odds; a trine lets them flow.
We sort them here by strength. Tight orbs come first — the closer the angle, the louder the aspect sings.
Moon trine Venus
0° 25′
Venus square Ascendant
0° 08′
Mercury trine Neptune
0° 10′
Mars square MC
0° 11′
Mars conjunction Pluto
1° 28′
Saturn opposition Ascendant
2° 49′
Pluto square MC
1° 17′
Sun square Moon
4° 08′
Sun sextile Ascendant
4° 25′
Venus square Saturn
2° 41′
Mars trine North Node
1° 13′
Mercury sextile Chiron
1° 59′
Jupiter trine MC
5° 11′
Neptune sextile Chiron
2° 09′
Venus opposition Uranus
6° 12′
Jupiter square Neptune
2° 19′
Mars sextile Uranus
3° 56′
Pluto trine North Node
2° 41′
Uranus opposition North Node
2° 43′
Saturn square Uranus
3° 31′
A chart pattern is a meaningful geometric shape formed by three or more planets connected by aspects. These configurations are read as unified dynamics rather than individual aspects.
Classic includes the shapes established in modern astrology — T-Squares, Grand Trines, and more. Extended adds geometric configurations that carry meaning beyond traditional astrology.
01
T-Square
Fixed
Ascendant · Saturn · Venus — two squares converging on an opposition; the chart's engine room.
Planets in this pattern
Saturn16° 53′ Taurus
Venus19° 34′ Leo
02
T-Square
Fixed
Saturn · Uranus · Venus — two squares converging on an opposition; the chart's engine room.
Planets in this pattern
Saturn16° 53′ Taurus
Uranus13° 22′ Aquarius
Venus19° 34′ Leo
01
Wedge
Focus: Mars
Mars · North Node · Uranus — an opposition with a third planet trining one end and sextiling the other; tension finds its outlet.
Planets in this pattern
Mars9° 27′ Sagittarius
North Node10° 39′ Leo
Uranus13° 22′ Aquarius
02
Minor Triangle
Air & Water
Chiron · Mercury · Neptune — a trine bridged by a third planet sextiling both ends; ease with a focal point.
Planets in this pattern
Chiron29° 38′ Scorpio
Mercury1° 37′ Libra
Neptune1° 47′ Aquarius
Chart signature
The chart signature is the set of high-level patterns that shape the chart's overall character — elemental and modal balance, overall shape on the wheel, and a handful of structural observations.
By element
Fire
3
Earth
3
Air
1
Water
1
By modality
Cardinal
1
Fixed
3
Mutable
4
The chart forms a Seesaw shape
Planets gather in two opposite groups — you live in the push and pull between them.
Square is the most common aspect
Seven of 20 aspects are squares — that flavour colours the chart.
Air is a singleton element
Mercury is the only air placement — it carries the whole element on its own, disproportionately weighted.
Water is a singleton element
Ascendant is the only water placement — it carries the whole element on its own, disproportionately weighted.
Cardinal is a singleton modality
Mercury is the only cardinal placement — it carries the whole modality on its own, disproportionately weighted.