Island Marking
A small oval interrupting a line on the palm, read for a contained period of strain or pause.
In Palmistry
Palmistry reads the palm as a portrait of temperament rather than a forecast. The four major lines, the eight mounts, the shape of the hand, and the smaller markings each carry classical interpretations refined over more than two thousand years across multiple cultures.
How Island Marking is read
A small oval interrupting a line on the palm, read for a contained period of strain or pause. Within palmistry, a reader weighs island marking against the rest of the chart rather than reading it on its own. The practitioner notes how it interacts with the neighbouring features, and the result is offered for self-reflection, not prediction.
Related terms in Palmistry
- Heart Line
The uppermost major crease on the palm, read for patterns in affection, attachment, and emotional expression.
- Head Line
The horizontal crease crossing the centre of the palm, read for thinking style and intellectual temperament.
- Life Line
The curve arcing around the thumb mount, read for vitality, constitution, and major shifts in circumstance.
- Fate Line
The vertical line rising toward the middle finger, read for career path and the pull of outside obligation.
- Simian Line
A single crease replacing the separate heart and head lines, read for fused feeling and thinking.
See island marking in your own reading
Palm Reading reads island marking as part of a complete editorial reading drawn from your photo. A magazine-quality layout you can save, print, or share.
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