The 64 hexagrams and their meanings
The I Ching, the old Chinese Book of Changes, answers a question with one of sixty-four figures, each built from six stacked lines. A reading is rarely a verdict. It is closer to a mirror held at an angle, showing the shape of the moment you are standing in and where its weight is leaning.
Every hexagram below is laid out in the traditional King Wen order, the sequence the book has carried for roughly three thousand years. Pick the one you drew, or simply browse. Each page opens out its meaning in plain English: the two trigrams it is made from, what it tends to counsel in a reading, how it reads in love and in work, and the Tarot card that rhymes with it on our deck side. If you would rather let one find you, you can always cast the coins first and come back with a number.
Prefer the visual version? The interactive 64-grid shows each glyph side by side. To learn how the figures are built, start with the eight trigrams, or read a question through both the Tarot and the I Ching at once. For reflection and insight, not fortune-telling — see our disclaimer.