About
A map at the kitchen table.
Astrocartography is an old, fairly simple idea: a birth chart is cast for a time and a place, so the same chart expresses differently depending on where on earth you stand. Plot that across the whole map and you get a personal geography — places where a chart runs easy, places where it asks for work, places where it rearranges you.
For one person, that map has been available for decades, mostly free, mostly looking like flight-tracking software from 1998. For two people — or a family, a friend group, a founding team — it has barely existed at all. The only way to get a couple's astrocartography read has been to commission it from a working astrologer: a few hundred dollars, a few weeks of waiting, a PDF. Often a very good PDF. But not something you can pan around at the kitchen table while you argue happily about where to live.
Lovecartography is that missing thing.
What we do differently
The whole chart, not the keyword. Most free tools read a Venus line as “love and beauty” for everyone, every time. But a working astrologer never reads a line in isolation — a Venus line lands differently for someone whose natal Venus is well-supported than for someone whose Venus is under strain. Every interpretation here is conditioned on the full natal chart. That is the single biggest difference between this and every free map on the internet.
Honesty about weak signals.When several people's charts are combined, some planetary averages are meaningful and some are statistical noise. We measure the difference and say so — a weak composite signal is shown as weak, or not shown at all, with the individual lines doing the work instead. A tool that always sounds confident is a tool you can't trust.
Places, not coordinates. Every meaningful spot on the map is named — city, region, country — and explained in plain English, in concrete domains: work, home, who you meet, how you sleep. No degree symbols required.
What we deliberately are not
Not a dating app. Not a horoscope feed. Not a chatbot with a star theme. Lovecartography does one thing: it maps how place interacts with the charts of people who already matter to each other. We treat the reader as smart and skeptical, we write what is observed in the chart rather than what fate supposedly decrees, and we would rather show you a weak signal honestly than dress it up.
The name
Cartography for the people you love. The reference points are vintage atlases, travel journals, and marine charts — ink on paper, the feeling of unfolding a map on a table. That is the product we are trying to deserve.
Get in touch
Questions, press, partnerships: [email protected].