The star in palmistry is rarely neutral. Composed of five to seven small lines crossing at a point, it almost always announces a notable, brilliant or upheaving event, in the domain of the mount carrying it.

Rarity: Visible on less than 10% of palms depending on its position. The cleaner it is, the more significant tradition judges it.

On which mount?

On the mount of Jupiter (under the index): lasting professional or social recognition. The 'classic' sign of success.

On the mount of Apollo (under the ring finger): fame, artistic recognition, creative success.

On the mount of Mercury (under the little finger): commercial success, recognized oratorical talents.

On the mount of the Moon (edge side, opposite the thumb): exceptional intuition, memorable travels.

On the mount of Venus (at the base of the thumb): an intense and marking love, for better or worse.

Star on a line

A star placed directly on a line changes the meaning of that line at that precise point. On the heart line, it can signal a love at first sight. On the life line, an event that marked you physically.

A star at the end of a line crowns the journey of that line, it says: everything this line carries leads to this point.

How to know if it's really a star

A real star has at least 5 branches meeting at a single point. Three lines crossing form a cross, not a star.

Under good light, take a photo of your palm slightly hollowed, it's easier than observing with the naked eye.

The star is one of the most encouraging signs of palmistry, provided you read it on the right mount.