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Enter a description of the emoji you want to create. Be as detailed or simple as you like - our AI understands it all.
Choose your preferred emoji style, colors, and aesthetic. Adjust settings to match your vision perfectly.
Click generate and watch as AI creates your custom emoji in seconds. Download in high quality and use anywhere.
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Advanced AI technology creates unique, professional-quality emojis from your text descriptions in seconds.
Choose from multiple styles, colors, and expressions. Create emojis that perfectly match your brand or personality.
Get high-resolution emoji files ready to use across all platforms, devices, and messaging apps immediately.
Generate crisp, vibrant emojis with perfect clarity and detail that look amazing at any size.
No limits on how many emojis you can create. Experiment freely and generate as many designs as you need.
From concept to completed emoji in seconds. No waiting, no hassle - just instant creative results.
The first emoji set was created in 1999 by Japanese artist Shigetaka Kurita, consisting of just 176 pixelated 12×12 designs for NTT DoCoMo's mobile platform.
The original 176 emoji designs by Kurita are permanently housed in the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York City since 2016, recognized as important digital art.
As of 2023, there are over 3,600 official emoji in the Unicode Standard, growing from the original 722 that were standardized in 2010.
Over 10 billion emoji are sent every day across messaging platforms worldwide, with the 'Face with Tears of Joy' emoji being used more than 2 billion times daily on Facebook alone.
In 2015, the 'Face with Tears of Joy' emoji became Oxford Dictionaries' Word of the Year, the first pictograph to receive this honor in the award's history.
Creating a new official emoji takes approximately 18-24 months from proposal to release, requiring approval from the Unicode Consortium's technical committee and multiple design iterations.
Each tech company designs its own emoji artwork, which is why Apple, Google, Samsung, and Microsoft versions can look dramatically different while representing the same Unicode character.
The word 'emoji' comes from Japanese 'e' (絵, picture) and 'moji' (文字, character), and despite appearances, has no etymological connection to the English word 'emotion.'
Artists like Carla Gannis and Nastya Ptichek have created entire gallery exhibitions using only emoji, spawning a recognized art movement called 'Emoji Art' since 2013.
In 2009, the entire novel 'Moby Dick' was translated into emoji as 'Emoji Dick' by Fred Benenson, consisting of 10,000 sentences and requiring 800+ crowdsourced contributors.
The 2017 'Emoji Movie' generated over $217 million worldwide, while emoji-branded merchandise generates an estimated $500 million in annual retail sales globally.
Japan has over 90 unique emoji that don't appear in other regions' keyboards, including various cultural symbols like bowing businessman, Japanese dolls, and specific food items like dango.
Everything you need to know
Create your perfect custom emoji in seconds with AI. No design skills needed - just your imagination.