Aesthetic Emojis & Kaomoji
Make your text stand out with beautiful emoji styles and Japanese kaomoji. Perfect for social media, bios, and messages. Just type, convert and copy!
Type any text to see all available styles
Mathematical Script
Mathematical Bold Script
Fullwidth
Circled
Squared
Superscript
Small Caps
Fullwidth + Aesthetic
Hearts Decoration
Stars Decoration
Bubble Text
Cursive Handwriting
Wavy Text
Dot Above
Rainbow Style
Space Style
Parenthesized
Regional Indicator Spaced
Star Border
Flower Border
Dot Border
Type a text to see all font styles
Click on any style card to copy to clipboard
Copyable emoji and kaomoji collections
Pick a complete accent, face or frame. Each button copies exactly what is shown.
Soft accents
Nature
Text faces
Frames
Perfect for Social Media
Kaomoji Styles
Japanese-style emoticons that add personality to your messages
Emoji Combos
Beautiful combinations of emojis and text for unique styles
Copy & Paste
Simply click on any style to copy and paste directly into your apps
Aesthetic composition guide
Build a repeatable visual language, not a random symbol pile
Aesthetic text works when its symbols, spacing and emoji support one mood. Start with readable words, choose one small set of accents, and repeat that pattern consistently across a bio, caption or profile.
Give each element a job
Use a frame to mark the beginning or end, a kaomoji to express emotion, and one emoji family to set the theme. Repeating every decoration in the same line usually makes the result feel noisy.
Watch width and wrapping
Fullwidth letters, flags and joined emoji consume more screen space than ordinary text. Preview narrow mobile layouts and remove separators first when a composition wraps awkwardly.
Copy emoji as complete sequences
A visible emoji can contain several code points joined together. Use the collection button to copy the complete value; selecting only one component can separate a family, flag, skin tone, or presentation style after paste.
Keep the emotion understandable
Kaomoji and symbol frames rely on visual context that may not be announced clearly by a screen reader. Pair a decorative face with ordinary words when the emotion, warning, or request matters, and avoid using symbols as the only label for an action.
Composition check
- Choose a soft, nature, face or frame collection.
- Keep one plain-text version of important words.
- Copy the whole combination and test it where it will appear.