Phases II - H1 Timeframe
When it comes to timeframes, we have the concept of fractality that helps us make better judgement.
Theory
This is where H1 comes into play, it is the perfect balance between our Weekly/daily time frame and our ETF
Remember, we will now begin to structure everything. FEEL -> FLOW -> FLUX;
- Feel = HTF such as Monthly and weekly timeframe
- Flow = Daily, H4, H1
- Flux = M15 and below.
Our H1, which falls under our FLOW, is like our middleman, the glue between all the pieces. Many new traders really miss out on the importance of how the 60min TF is acting. When it’s align with your daily direction, it can act as a stoplight to give you the green light to enter your Flux-state.
It is the final checklist you need to tick oÉ with your intuition. When you become patient enough, you will save lots of unnecessary losses once you master and become familiar with the H1 timeframe.

Just notice how clean price action is on the H1, how price moves with clear intent and direction.
From X OB's, respecting your BPRs and seeing where liquidity flows to an area where volume can being injected to target the highs.

This is how one full trading day, 24 hours, looks on the 60min TF .
The goal is to make sure how you can filter out which parts of the day are necessary to trade.

So now we can filter through what we like to call the true day, the price action that we focus on the most.
This is our NY midnight open to 15;00 (3 PM) New York. This will be the range where we look for opportunities, which often enough will be from 02;00 till 10;00 AM NY time. Thats our playing field, this is our roadmap. Here we will look to participate with our daily bias and our DOL.
We are literally making it easier for us to focus on higher probable scenarios.
Now start drawing a horizontal line from midnight open to the end of our most volume session London open, which is around 11 AM NY TIME.
So,
00;00 NY to 11;00 NY time, notice how all the best bearish opportunities will happen above MNO, and all the best bullish opportunities below MNO. Obviously, this is not always the case, but there is theory, practicality behind this concept.

Now understand how with every time right after NY midnight open, during London, we sweep and induce some sort of liquidity. Importance is the fact that we induce some sort of liquidity, previous structure, grab fuel to make space for the next move.

Price often shoots into a PDA—either a premium or discount array—grabbing liquidity before reversing direction. As you can see in the chart below, from left to right, the price taps into an order block (OB) on Monday, revisits another OB on Tuesday, and touches yet another OB on Wednesday. After that, the charts become choppy and eventually settle into a sideways movement.

It’s no coincidence that these moves happen like that, this is because we look at Lows or highs of the day, you see how clearer the tap into an array is, the higher the probability is that we formed a high/low of the day
In each of the arrays, Monday through Wednesday, when it was clear, we formed the LOTD or HOTD
In this case, Monday tapped into OB, formed LOTD, Tuesday, into Feedback OB and formed HOTD, Wednesday into X OB and formed LOTD again. From there Thursday and Friday were lower probability as there was no sweep in a direction.
It’s a numbers game ey, stack your probability.
Now the goal is to spot areas where New York is an amplification of London, if there is clear delivery on your PDA, and London is one sided, you can anticipate good opportunities for NY.
Look closely.

See how we exactly amplify each session in New York, with replicable moves after a clear delivery during London.
This is the fractality in sessions, just as price is fractal, and time is fractal, sessions can be as well.
Let it click. Add in the close, and observe the patterns Notice how when we enter the end of the session, of the true day, which lines up with London close, the momentum caps, our delivery is done, fuel is out of the picture.
Dead time.

It all caps then.
No, you don't need to annotate these sessions, but get used to them. Understand the cycle and observe the patterns, the more filters you can look for the more data you can recognize.
Plan the trade, plan the idea, you are here to deceiver the candlesticks, the market. SO, organize your playing field in a such a manner that it becomes effortless.

Always draw the main liquidity pools, so you know what the draw on LQ is. Notice how from Mondayonwards, we begin to create clear pools of liquidity, areas to which price is drawn to. We have the PDL,which is taken on Tuesday, which in turn leaves a PDH which gets taken out on Wednesday. See that once you plot out the obvious levels, that it becomes impossible to miss what you want to see.
You are merely planning your preference. Notice how once we keep taking out the BSL levels, we continue to attack those levels which are left higher, such as PWH from Friday.
When it comes to resting liquidity, it is important to start looking through timeframes. Here the goal is to see how we can anticipate the structure on different timeframes on just the H1.
Notice how in most cases price needs more effort to break the high resistance high/low, acting more as a blockade in volume because it requires more rebalancing.
Whereas price can slice straight through the low resistance highs and lows.
Imagine the higher timeframe, such as the daily, is pushing the price lower. On the 60-minute (H1) chart, we form a high resistance low. This doesn’t mean there’s no sell-side liquidity (SSL) beneath that low whether it’s SSL or SSLQP. It simply means that it might be more protected, and the price could struggle more around these lows.