How to draw supply and demand zones for harami pattern?

How to draw supply and demand zones for harami pattern?

What is HARAMI Pattern?
Haramis are candlestick patterns in which a large candlestick is followed by a smaller candlestick whose body is located within the vertical range of the larger body. Haramis can be bullish or bearish and can be a sign of a potential reversal of the current trend.

HOW TO USE HARAMIS PATTERNS
 They are the building blocks of a trend
 They usually happen at the end of an uptrend/downtrend
 They can happen at flip zones and previous SR/SD zones that are being revisited.
 Don’t use if pattern is in the middle of nowhere, these patterns are good reversal candlestick patterns but they need to be at bigger timeframe zones for higher probability trading

The Bullish and bearish harami Pattern
• Bullish pattern = demand reversal pattern
• Bearish harami = supply reversal pattern

How to draw zone for Bullish and bearish harami Patterns:
 For Demand Zone
 For distal line – use low of the zone
 For proximal line – use high of the tightly packed body
 For Supply Zone
 For distal line – use high of the zone
 For proximal line – use low of the tightly packed body

Tweaking and extending the proximal/distal lines of a level:
There are times when the proximal and distal lines of a base can be tweaked, for instance when there is a single basing candle (not a wide one) or we have several low volatility candles at the base without long wicks.

Remember you can be flexible as long as you always keep the same risk, the wider the level the smaller the trade size, the narrower the bigger the trade size. Experience will tell you when you should be extending the proximal lines and cover the upper of lower shadows. As long as you use the same risk per trade it will be fine.

WHAT IS A DISTAL LINE AND A PROXIMAL LINE?
An area of supply or demand is not just a single price/line (like classic support/resistance), but a zone/area composed of a number of ticks.

For a supply zone, The highest part of that (rectangle) is the distal line, that is, the highest price in the zone. The lowest part of that rectangle is the proximal line, which is the lowest and the closest to current price.

There are some cases when you can adjust the proximal line:
• When there is a single candle at the base
• The candlesticks forming the base are tight and small, we can draw the proximal line covering the lower shadows (supply) or upper shadows (demand)

Note: There is no flexibility when it comes to drawing Distal line – it should always follow rigid rules as it is related to SL.