When you have time, compare these three setups with the five listed in your personal notes that were written from a one-hour perspective.
This is the first of what should be the definitive trade setups you will be looking to take advantage of from this point on:
Enter positions when the 8-hour baseline reverses direction to rejoin the slope of the 12-day trend—especially if and when the reversal is being confirmed by the 16-hour baseline. (You have even more reason to execute this type of trade if price is simultaneously being rejected at the four-day temporal support/resistance level.)
You also wrote it this way: If the slope of the 12-day baseline is clearly angled in a given direction, and the 8-hour baseline assumes a trajectory headed in the opposite direction; enter positions as the 8-hour trend reverses direction so as to realign itself with the twelve-day baseline—especially if the slopes of the 2-day, 4-day and/or 6-day trends match that of the 12-day baseline.
Here is an intraday corollary to the swing trade setup describe above: If candlesticks begin painting at or near the 96-hour (4-day) temporal support/resistance level, enter positions as the 40-, 60-, 90-, and/or 120-minute baseline(s) reverse direction (as price is rejected at such levels).
Here is a completely different scenario to look for using a lower time frame chart: Enter positions when the 40-minute baseline reverses direction to realign itself with the slope of the 8-hour baseline—especially when this occurs near the upper or lower end of the 4-hour price range. (You have even more reason to execute this type of trade if the 60-, 90-, and/or 120-minute baselines are reversing direction right along with it.)
This setup might constitute an intraday corollary to the one described above: If the slope of the eight-hour baseline is clearly angled in one direction or the other, and candlesticks begin painting at or near the 14-hour temporal support/resistance level, enter positions as the 40-, 60-, 90-, and/or 120-minute baselines reverse direction (as price is rejected at such levels).
Here is yet another swing-style setup: If candlesticks begin painting at or near an outer edges of the 4-day and/or 12-day price range(s), enter positions as the trajectory of the 24-hour baseline transitions from heading toward the relevant band(s) to heading away from it/them—especially if the resulting trade will end up traveling in the same direction as the slope of the 12-day baseline.
And here is the last situation you described in your notes this weekend: If the slope of the 4-hour and 8-hour baselines are clearly angled in a given direction, and the slopes of the 1-hour and/or 2-hour baselines adopt a trajectory moving in the opposite direction, enter positions as the 1-hour and/or 2 hour trend lines reverse course so as to realign themselves with the slopes of the 4-hour and 8-hour trends.