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Everyday sign

Harvest Tea Leaf Symbol Meaning

A shock of corn is a somewhat sad emblem showing that you have sown that of which the reaping may be tears; it is also a warning of illness, especially to the aged

Harvest tea leaf reading cup example

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CoffeeTells also supports tea-leaf meanings, so you can check the shape, placement, and nearby signs without scanning the whole index.

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Harvest reading examples

Harvest tea leaves cup variation one
Harvest tea leaves cup variation two
Harvest tea leaves cup variation three

How to read Harvest in tea leaves

Harvest in a tea leaf reading points to A shock of corn is a somewhat sad emblem showing that you have sown that of which the reaping may be tears; it is also a warning of illness, especially to the aged. Read it as a tea-leaf sign first: the shape, cup position, and nearby clusters matter as much as the dictionary meaning.

In tea-leaf reading, harvest is not read as a perfect picture. It is read as a cluster of damp leaves, stems, dots, and empty porcelain that briefly resembles the sign. The stronger the resemblance and the clearer its position, the more weight the symbol carries.

This entry is based on paraphrased notes from Cicely Kent's tea-leaf symbol book, rewritten for the Tasseography.org tea archive.

Cup position

How placement changes the reading

Rim

Near the rim, harvest describes something close to the present: news, movement, or a matter already visible to the querent.

Middle

In the middle of the cup, harvest points to the developing stage of the question and the choices that shape the coming weeks.

Base

At the base, harvest is slower and more rooted. It may show a hidden cause, a delayed result, or an emotional foundation.

Handle

Near the handle, harvest is personal to the querent, their home circle, or a decision only they can make.