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White Heart, Flamingo Added As Emoji Candidates

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White Heart, Flamingo Added As Emoji Candidates

As work on the the emoji list for 2019 continues, a white heart, flamingo, and maté have been added to the draft candidates list.

White heart has been one of the most popular emojis requested by Emojipedia users in 2018. This, in addition to a brown heart, could be on phones in 2019 if approved in the final Emoji 12.0 specification.

White Heart, Flamingo Added As Emoji Candidates
Above: A white heart is one of Emojipedia's top requests for 2018.

These additions join existing candidates such as a Hindu Temple, parachute, and yawning face.

It's worth noting these are only draft candidates, and no details are expected to be finalized until late 2018. View more from Unicode about this update.

What's Next

For most phone users, the real focus is on the Emoji 11.0 release which is coming to phones in the coming months. 157 new emojis are approved as part of this release, including redheads, softball, llama, curly hair, skateboard, lobster and more.

White Heart, Flamingo Added As Emoji Candidates
Above: While the 2019 emoji list is being worked on, these 157 new emojis are coming to phones this year.


Tony Hawk's Car Gets Emoji Upgrade

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Tony Hawk's Car Gets Emoji Upgrade

Tony Hawk, professional skateboarder and beloved video game character, is a bit easier to spot in the real world now thanks to a new set of plates on his car.

Originally posted on Hawk's Instagram story, photos show his front license plate featuring the forthcoming skateboard emoji.

The backstory here is that Emojipedia's original skateboard design was considered a bit too retro, and so a new design was created with Hawk's input.

We based the updated design on Hawk's own skateboard with distinctive 60mm wheels.[1]

For a man who clearly enjoys technology as well as skateboarding, it seems only fitting that his Tesla plates are already Emoji 11.0 compatible.

Major vendors such as Apple, Google and Microsoft are expected to support the skateboard emoji - and all the others from Emoji 11.0 - in the second half of 2018. No release dates have been announced at the time of writing.

Tony Hawk's Car Gets Emoji Upgrade
Above: Tony Hawk's car sporting a skateboard emoji (modelled after his own board) on the front. Photo: Tony Hawk.


  1. Other sample images we updated at the same time included the lobster and DNA. Final designs will be created by each vendor. Emojipedia Sample Images are for illustrative purposes only. ↩︎

Twemoji 2.7 Emoji Changelog

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Twemoji 2.7 Emoji Changelog

2018 has been an active year for Twemoji. While we have yet to see any of the new Emoji 11.0 additions just yet, today Twitter has begun to roll out Twemoji 2.7 - the vendor's third minor update this year.

This particular update is sure to be relished by pickle lovers, with the 🥒 Cucumber emoji now looks as though it has taken a brine bath[1].

Twemoji 2.7 Emoji Changelog

Thits change brings the design closer to most other vendors where the green vegetable is shown whole, as opposed to being partily cut up into slices à la the design shown by Apple and WhatsApp.

In total Twemoji 2.7 features 32 emoji changes.

One theme of this update appears to be greater convergence with other vendors, with changes to directionality and the removal of bounding frames (i.e. the blue sky behind a number of nature scenes) among the more considerable design modifications.

The 🎮 Video Game emoji, which displays as a gamepad, has had its upper grey and orange circles replaced: a D-pad now appears on the left, while four different-coloured input buttons adorn the right.

Twemoji 2.7 Emoji Changelog

The emoji no longer appears as though it features four analogue sticks - a design yet to be attempted by hardware manufacturers for fairly obvious reasons.

The 👟 Running Shoe, in addition to changing colour and orientation, has been made much more detailed. Four white laces are now shown, as well as a heel stabiliser and a shoe tongue.

Twemoji 2.7 Emoji Changelog

🏘️ Houses has had a reduction in the number of windows:

Twemoji 2.7 Emoji Changelog

The various monkey face emojis have been redesigned, with their ears moved down from the tops of their heads, as is the case across all other major vendors. For example, the 🙊 Speak-No-Evil Monkey:

Twemoji 2.7 Emoji Changelog

A number of other emojis have been redrawn, many of which haven't been touched since the first Twemoji release in 2014. Some of these include:

Release

Twemoji 2.7 has begun rolling today. It will be available for all users of the Twitter website, Twitter mobile site, and Tweetdeck. As always, these updates are expected to appear within the Twemoji Open Source project in the near future.

Users of the iOS Twitter app continue to see native emojis from Apple, as do those on the latest releases of Android.


  1. Or vinegar - we don't discriminate between pickling processes here at Emojipedia. ↩︎

Twitter Switches to Twemoji on Android

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Twitter Switches to Twemoji on Android

Users of Twitter for Android may notice an emoji change when accessing the service today. Twemoji designs are now shown within Twitter, replacing native emojis previously shown from platform vendors such as Google and Samsung.

This update appears to target users on Android 7.x and below, who will now[1] see Twemoji designs for every emoji. The result? No more missing characters appearing on older systems where new emojis are intended to go.

Twitter Switches to Twemoji on Android
Above: Twitter app for Android 7.1 before (left) and after (right) the switch to Twemoji.

One challenge facing Google in recent years is the incredibly slow adoption of new Android releases. At the time of writing, the Oreo update from 2017 is only installed on 6% of Android devices.

Over 1/3 of users are on a version of Android dating back to 2014 or earlier. This fragmentation is nothing new, but lack of new emoji support for years after a release really highlights the issue for users.

Twitter Switches to Twemoji on Android
Above: Only 6% of Android users are using the latest release (Oreo) from 2017.

Twitter's switch to using Twemoji on Android will bring the app in line with the emojis seen on Twitter.com (mobile and desktop), as well as TweetDeck.

It's worth noting that this emoji implementation has been done using Google's own EmojiCompat library. Created by Google in 2017 to allow apps to support new emojis even on old systems, a key feature is that app developers don't have to use Google's own emojis.

In this instance, Twitter is using EmojiCompat to load Twemoji designs for pre-8.x Android users. For example, this tweet previously showed on a Samsung phone missing a number of newer characters, but now shows all emojis (using Twemoji).

Twitter Switches to Twemoji on Android
Above: Users no longer see emojis from their device manufacturer in Twitter for Android, but instead see Twemoji designs. Before: Samsung designs / After: Twitter designs.

For those stuck on older Android releases this may be a welcome change, particularly as it brings new emoji support to older phones along with the design changes.

An option to toggle which emoji set is shown (Twitter, or native) is provided.

Twitter Switches to Twemoji on Android
Above: Users can disable this new feature to stick with the native emoji set.

Release

Testing of this feature had been taking place for a subset of users since at least March 2018, and is now supported for users of the official Twitter app using Android 4.4 KitKat — Android 7.1 Nougat.

Twitter Design Lead Bryan Haggerty confirmed to Emojipedia that at least 50% of eligible Twitter users should now see this change, with the feature being enabled for more users over the course of this week.


  1. Specifically, Android 4.4—Android 7.1. Rollout has increased to more users recently, and this is increasing. Update: May 29, 2018. This option is now available for all Twitter for Android users on Android Android 4.4-Android 7.1, and also appears for those on the Android P beta. Android 8.x Oreo is currently exempt. ↩︎

Browse the Emoji Archives

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Browse the Emoji Archives

Emojipedia's emoji archives now date back ten years, but how do you check what an emoji used to look like?

You're not dreaming. There used to be a gavel emoji on iOS. It didn't get removed, it simply changed appearance. Yesterday's gavel is today's 🔨 Hammer. Here's where to find it:

Browse the Emoji Archives
Above: Click any 🔨 Hammer on Emojipedia to view its previous designs.

Similarly, there's an emoji that many people will remember on iOS that looked a bit like the 😬 Grimacing Face but with smiling eyes. That emoji today looks like this: 😁

Browse the Emoji Archives
Above: History of 😁 on iOS, showing previous grimace-like designs.

It's not just iOS. Android used to have some pretty wild emoji designs, with most of the smileys displaying an emotion on an alien creature. Here's the evolution of the 😍 Smiling Face With Heart-Eyes on Android:

Browse the Emoji Archives
Above: History of the heart eyes emoji on Android shown on Emojipedia.

Keen for more emoji history?

When viewing the emoji archive for a vendor, tap or click the version name (i.e. Android 4.3) to view all emojis from that release.

At the time of writing, Emojipedia contains every single emoji update from Apple, Google, Microsoft, Samsung, WhatsApp, Facebook, Twitter, LG, and HTC for the years 2008 to 2018.

Browse the Emoji Archives
Above: Android had an alien-branded emoji font back in 2012, keeping in theme with the Android alien mascot.

A popular emoji set that many look back on was iOS 5.1. This was the first emoji set from Apple that used the newly approved Unicode codepoints for emoji support.

The designs used are similar to those dating back to 2008, but shown at an increased resolution compared to Apple's first emoji-supporting OS: iPhone OS 2.2.

Browse the Emoji Archives
Above: iOS 5.1: one of the iconic early releases of Apple's emoji set.

Here's a few other emojis with an interesting past on various platforms. Have a click through some of the archives to see how they evolved to their current designs: 💁 👯 💩 🐚 🎓.

Other emoji archives that are interesting to check out are the first emoji sets from companies like Facebook, Microsoft, or Samsung.

Read More

What's New In Unicode 11.0

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What's New In Unicode 11.0

Unicode 11.0 arrives on June 5, 2018. This signals the date which companies can begin supporting the new emojis.

The final emoji list for 2018 was announced back in February, and the underlying release required to make this possible is now here.[1]

Vendor such as Apple, Google, Microsoft or Samsung tends to have their own schedule for making new emojis available to the public, with most likely to support Unicode 11's new emojis by the end of 2018.

What are the new emojis?

New emojis added in Unicode 11.0 include a softball, kangaroo, llama, partying face, parrot, lobster, and more.

What's New In Unicode 11.0
Above: Parrot, llama, and lobster are new in Unicode 11.0. Image: Emojipedia Sample Image Collection.

In total, 66 new emoji code points exist in Unicode 11.0. 62 of these are for emojis you'll see on the keyboard:

What's New In Unicode 11.0
Above: Six new smileys form part of Unicode 11.0. Image: Emojipedia Sample Image Collection.

Additionally, four emoji components have also been added in Unicode 11.0. These are for use in sequences (such as a woman with curly hair or a man with red hair) but not expected to be shown as their own characters on emoji keyboards:

There are more emojis for 2018 that don't require new code points. These are listed as part of Emoji 11.0 and not Unicode 11.0. The total number of new emojis in 2018 is 157.

All the details of this release are available in Unicode's extensive documentation, but for a summary of what else is new from an emoji perspective, read on.

  • View the Unicode 11.0 emoji list (62 emojis + 4 emoji components = 66 new emoji code points)
  • View the Emoji 11.0 emoji list (157 total new emojis)

What is the difference between Unicode 11.0 and Emoji 11.0?

Unicode 11.0 contains 684 new code points, 66 of which are considered to be emoji or emoji component characters.

Emoji 11.0 includes sequences that don't require new code points, such as those for genders or skin tones:

Note: The new emoji hair components theorertically allow any emoji to have red hair, however Emoji 11.0 only lists a woman and man with red hair. Redheaded dancers, surfers or brides are not present in this list.

  • View the Emoji 11.0 emoji list for all 2018 emojis

Why isn't this Emoji 6.0?

The last emoji release (in 2017) was named Emoji 5.0. Logically one might assume the next release would be called Emoji 6.0.

So what happened to Emoji 6.0? It was decided that as most[2] emoji releases come out at the same time as a full Unicode release, they would better versioned with the same numbers.

A timeline document published by Unicode in 2017 notes:

“This proposes ‘turning the volume up to 11’: changing the version number for Emoji v6.0 to Emoji v11.0 to synchronize major versions of Emoji and Unicode. If an intermediate version of the emoji data and/or UTS #51 is needed (adding RGI or emojification) those can use minor or update versions (such as 11.1 or 11.0.1).”

As such, there were no emoji releases versioned 6.0-10.0. Emoji 11.0 is the release that follows Emoji 5.0.

What do the new emojis look like?

As with all emoji sets, designs vary by vendor. It's expected major vendors will be implementing their own version of these emojis in the coming weeks and months.[3]

Emojipedia creates sample images in an Apple-like style to show how we think they might look, and this is our full set of mockups for 2018:

Since posting this video, we changed the appearance of a few designs, but this video still gives a good overview of what to expect on phones this year.

Here's an overview of the 2018 emoji set:

What's New In Unicode 11.0
Above: Emojipedia Sample Images for 157 new emojis released in Emoji 11.0.

How do I get the new emojis?

Platforms like Facebook and Twitter can update emoji designs on the web at any time. Recently Twitter also rolled out a feature for Twemoji to work in the Android app, too.

For companies like Apple, Google, and Microsoft, emoji updates are tied to major OS updates. Once released (likely later in 2018) new emoji support automatically arrives with the OS update. This is likely later in 2018.

When will each company support the new emojis?

At the time of writing, no major vendor has released their 2018 emoji updates. Based on historical trends, this is when we expect to see releases come to consumers.

June—August 2018

September—December 2018

January-February 2019

Unknown[4]

What else is in Unicode 11?

Characters that are new in Unicode 11.0 but are not emojis include a series of half-stars. These allow the common method of scoring reviews as a number of stars and half-stars to use Unicode characters within text rather than images (or ★★★½).

What's New In Unicode 11.0
Above: Half stars aren't emojis, but they are part of Unicode 11.0. Image: Shirriff / West Proposal.

A Copyleft symbol (looks like a © copyright symbol flipped horizontally) is also new in Unicode 11.0 as well as new scripts and characters from lesser-used languages.

Why isn't there a flamingo?

Flamingo and White Heart are two of the emojis most requested by Emojipedia users in 2018. Both are shortlisted for the 2019 release of Emoji 12.0.

What's New In Unicode 11.0
Above: Some of Emojipedia's most requested emojis are shortlisted for 2019.

What's coming in 2019?

The next Unicode release is planned for March 2019. Some of the draft candidates include a diving mask, axe, waffle, diya lamp and hindu temple.

Note that at this stage these are only candidates, and no decisions have been made about the final emoji list for 2019.

Final thoughts

If you start seeing missing characters on your social media in the coming months, Unicode 11.0 could be the reason.

As platforms release their emoji updates at different times, there is often a period where some users begin sending new emojis while others cannot yet see them.

One solution to this is to copy and paste the missing character (usually shown as a box with an X or question mark in it) into Emojipedia's search field which will show you what it's meant to be. Or send it in a tweet to @botmoji for an immediately reply.

What's New In Unicode 11.0
Above: Emojipedia's @botmoji Twitter account can detect any emoji sent to it. Even those not yet supported by major vendors.


  1. Now = June 5, 2018. ↩︎

  2. Not always. Emoji 4.0 was released off-cycle between Unicode 9.0 in 2016 and Unicode 10.0 in 2017. ↩︎

  3. Twitter design lead Bryan Haggerty confirmed on the latest Emoji Wrap that Twemoji would be supporting Emoji 11.0 in "early June". ↩︎

  4. WhatsApp released their first emoji set in 2017 so it's too soon to know how prompt they might be with future releases. ↩︎

Apple Unveils Memoji

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Apple Unveils Memoji

A new emoji-like avatar from Apple is called Memoji and coming to iOS 12 this year.

Announced in the keynote for Apple's World Wide Developer Conference, Memoji is basically Animoji but with your own face as the character.

Apple Unveils Memoji

Like Animoji, this isn't related to regular emojis sent within text from the emoji keyboard. This is closer in genre to Nintendo Mii, Bitmoji, and Samsung's AR Emoji that are used for personalized stickers and videos.

Other related announcements included four new options in Animoji (🐨 Koala, 🐯 Tiger, 👻 Ghost, 🦖 T-Rex), tongue detection, as well as the ability to replace your face with a Memoji (or Animoji) in FaceTime.[1]

Apple Unveils Memoji

These new features are coming to the public with the release of iOS 12 in the second half of 2018.

New emojis were not demonstrated by Apple at WWDC. Unicode 11.0 is being released tomorrow, yet new emojis not generally added to iOS until later in the year.


  1. Possibly the bigger feature here is group FaceTime with up to 32 people on a call at once. But this is the Emojipedia Blog, not the FaceTime blog. ↩︎

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

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Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Today Unicode officially released version 11.0 of the Unicode Standard and Twitter has added support for all 157 new emojis to the latest version of Twemoji.

Twitter is typically one of the first companies to support new emoji releases[1] and Twemoji 11.0 marks the fourth Twemoji release from Twitter in 2018, though the first major update with new emojis.

Featuring 156 of the 157 new emoji recommended in Emoji 11.0, Twemoji 11.0 includes the much-requested 👨‍🦰 Red Haired Man and 👩‍🦰 Red Haired Woman.

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Twitter's other 2018 updates - Twemoji 2.5, Twemoji 2.6 and Twemoji 2.7 - each only featured design modifications in already existing emojis.

Note the numbering of those previous updates. With Twemoji 11.0, Twitter has opted to synchronize its version numbering with that of the Unicode Standard. This echoes the change of title made to the provisionally titled Emoji 6.0 in October of last year, when it was renamed Emoji 11.0.

But why only 156 of the 157 emojis featured in Emoji 11.0? Despite not being Recommended for General Interchange (RGI) until the release of Emoji 11.0, Twemoji has supported the 🏴‍☠️ Pirate Flag as a a ZWJ sequence of 🏴 Black Flag and ☠️ Skull and Crossbones since July 2016's Twemoji 2.1.2.

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog
Above: The Pirate Flag emoji design on Twitter. Image: Twemoji 2.1.2

This emoji has remained part of Twitter's emoji set and received no changes in this latest release.

Smileys

Emoji 11.0 features six new smiley face emojis which are all supported in Twemoji 11.0.

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

As discussed by Twitter Design Lead Bryan Haggerty on a recent episode of Emoji Wrap podcast, the new 🥰 Smiling Face With 3 Hearts has the potential to be quite a popular addition, considering the popularity of its fellow heart-featuring 😍 Heart Eyes and 😘 Kissing faces.

🥳 Partying Face echoes the frequently-used 🎉 Party Popper, while 🥵 Hot Face and 🥶 Cold Face might also be popular in the wake of extreme weather.

Hair Colors & Styles

Twemoji 11.0 features redheaded people, however, it also features six other emoji people defined by the hair (or lack thereof):

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Each of these emojis support the five skin tone modifiers. On that note, while it may look like 👨‍🦱 Man, Curly Haired and 👩‍🦱 Woman, Curly Haired are aping their fellow newbies 👨‍🦰 Red Haired Man and 👩‍🦰 Red Haired Woman, their hair color changes across skin tones:

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Each of these emojis are created via a ZWJ sequence that involves one of the four new "emoji component" code points that are included in Unicode 11.0:

While assigned code points in Unicode 11.0, these four emoji components feature no graphical representation in Twemoji 11.0 - they exist purely to allow for ZWJ sequences shown above.

Heroes & Villains

While originally proposed as smileys, Emoji 11.0 features humanoid Superhero and Supervillain emojis.

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

There are man and woman variants of both, as shown above. The base emojis that don't specify a gender (🦸 Superhero and 🦹 Supervillain ) respectively display as the 🦸‍♀️ Woman Superhero and 🦹‍♀️ Woman Supervillain within Twemoji 11.0.

As yet, no major vendors display the base emoji for any human with a non-binary or gender-inclusive design - excluding the specific characters of child, adult, and older adult.

Animals

Twemoji 11.0 features a total of ten new animals[2], including 🦡 Badger, 🦛 Hippo and 🦘 Kangaroo:

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

All are rendered full-bodied except the 🦝 Raccoon, which only has its face displayed. The 🦞 Lobster has its the correct number of legs which was highlighted when Emojipedia's own sample image was reported as being "anatomically incorrect".

Science

Although "science" is not technically an emoji category it its own right, Emoji 11.0 has introduced a series of new science-oriented emojis to join the 🔬 Microscope, ⚗️ Alembic and 🔭 Telescope. Here's what they look like in Twemoji 11.0:

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Body Parts & Footwear

There are two new emojis representing parts of the human body, 🦵 Leg and 🦶 Foot. Both support skin tones.

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Keeping with the theme of lower limbs, there are two new footwear emoji in Twemoji 11.0: 🥾 Hiking Boot and 🥿 Woman's Flat Shoe.

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

There is also a now a 🦷 Tooth and a 🦴 Bone emoji.

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Food

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Households Items & Other Objects

A series of new household items are featured within Twemoji 11.0. Most of these objects relate to either repair (e.g. 🧵 Thread and 🧷 Safety Pin) or cleanliness (e.g. 🧼 Soap and 🧽 Sponge).

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Also, the new 🧸 Teddy Bear emoji looks exceeding cute with it's large red neck ribbons.

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Two other new object emojis which may be found around households but would not generally be considered household items are 🧩 Jigsaw and 🧱 Bricks.

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Three additional emojis introduced in Twemoji 11.0 have particular meanings or associations within non-Western cultures:

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

The 🧨 Firecracker is a very popular pyrotechnic used in celebrations across the globe, but perhaps most famously as part of Chinese New Year. The 🧧 Red Gift Envelope is an object seen within in many Chinese or other East Asian and Southeast Asian traditions, where the red envelope is usually adorned with decorative gold words or patterns and will contain money as a gift. Meanwhile, the 🧿 Nazar Amulet is a token common in Middle Eastern and Mediterranean countries which is believed to protect the holder from the "evil eye".

Echoing the previously discussed 🏴‍☠️ Pirate Flag, the new ♾ Infinity and ♟ Chess Pawn emoji have also previously existed as non-RGI sequences. This was not, however, within Twemoji but rather within Samsung's emoji design set.

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Both ♾ Infinity and ♟ Chess Pawn append a Variation Selector-16 character to specify emoji presentation to be used.

Sports

Emoji 11.0 features four new sporting emoji. These include 🥍 Lacrosse, which is rendered as the racket and ball on Twemoji 11.0, as well as the 🥎 Softball and 🥏 Flying Disc[3].

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Lastly, let's look at the new 🛹 Skateboard emoji. Considering that Tony Hawk passed comment upon Emojipedia's original sample design and collaborated on its revision, did Twitter take his critiques on board when creating their own design?

Twemoji 11.0 Emoji Changelog

Perhaps, perhaps not. Twemoji has its own distinct design for the skateboard, and displays the it escalted in the middle of an ollie.

Release

Twemoji 11.0 is now available in Twitter's Open Source Twemoji Repository. New emoji support will be available for all users of the Twitter website, Twitter mobile site, and Tweetdeck in early June.

Update: June 6, 2018: Twitter users are reporting seeing these updates now on Twitter.com

Thanks to Twitter for Android's recent switch to Twemoji, all Android users Android 7.x and below should be able to see the new emojis shortly as well.

Users of the iOS Twitter app will continue to see native emojis from Apple and will therefore have to wait for Emoji 11.0 support to come to iOS later in the year.


  1. Last year Twitter released their Emoji 5.0 designs via Twemoji 2.3 almost an entire month before the final release of Unicode 10.0. ↩︎

  2. Assuming that you don't count 🦠 Microbe or the inanimate 🧸 Teddy Bear. ↩︎

  3. Fun fact: Emojipedia Chief Emoji Officer Jeremy Burge is self-described former player of Ultimate. ↩︎


Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android

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Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android

Google today released a new beta of Android P which includes a preview of new emoji updates coming later in 2018.

Mixed amongst a collection of emoji design changes and new emojis are two changes that give a nod to a potential future direction for Google: a gender-inclusive family and gender-inclusive couple.

Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android
Above: The default family emoji doesn't specify gender and Android P now uses a gender-inclusive design for this emoji.

For clarity aren't new emojis - these emojis already exist in the Unicode Standard and Google is now more closely following guidelines that recommend if a gender is not mentioned, then a gender-neutral or gender-inclusive display should be used.

The previous 👪 Family emoji had the same appearance as the explicit 👨‍👩‍👦 Family: Man, Woman, Boy emoji, and now they have different appearances.

The situation is the same for the 💑 Couple With Heart emoji which now shows a gender ambiguous display for both of the people in the couple.

Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android

The specific 👩‍❤️‍👨 Couple With Heart: Woman, Man emoji is unchanged.

In the current Android Beta only two emojis take on this nonbinary appearance, however it appears to be a nod from Google that we might see more of this in future releases.

For context, Google previously used genderless "blobs" for a number of emojis that now have a gendered human appearance. These were retired in 2017 to pave the way for new emoji professions which featured a man and woman version for each.

Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android
Above: Google previously displayed a number of now-human emojis as androgynous blobs. Image: Google / Emojipedia composite.

While this update is not a return to gender neutral blobs, it does recognize that a choice of Woman-Man, Man-Man, or Woman-Woman couples may not be a good fit for people who don't identify as either gender.[1]

New

Today's Android beta includes the 157 new emojis which include a cold face, hot face, mango, and llama.

Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android
Above: New emojis in Android P Beta 2. Image: Google / Emojipedia composite.

Also new is the long-awaited support for redheads. These come in the form of 12 new emojis: six redheaded women, and six redheaded men.

Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android
Above: Redheads are included in Android P Beta 2. Image: Google / Emojipedia composite.

Other hair-related additions from Emoji 11.0 include curly hair, white hair, and bald people.

Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android
Above: New choices for the top of your head in the next Android release. Image: Google / Emojipedia composite.

Changed

A number of existing emojis have had design updates in today's Android beta.

🗡️ Dagger has gained sparkles and a decorative gem on the handle.

Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android

🥗 Green Salad removes the egg, making it a vegan salad.

Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android

🐐 Goat has lost the furrowed brow giving it a less aggressive appearance.

Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android

🎻 Violin now includes a chin-rest.

Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android

🐢 Turtle is more alert than in the previous release.[2]

Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android

🔫 Pistol has changed from a weapon to a fluorescent orange toy.[3]

Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android

🦗 Cricket is now a cricket and not a grasshopper.

Inclusive Emojis Coming Back to Android

Release

Android P Beta 2 is out now for those with eligible devices and coming to consumers in July or August 2018.

As with all beta software, designs included today are subject to change prior to the final release in the coming months.


  1. For those interested in the history of gender within the emoji character set, here's some more to read on the topic ↩︎

  2. The 2014-era turtle on Android often comes up as an old favorite ↩︎

  3. This change started rolling out via Google's EmojiCompat library prior to Android P, but only for specific apps. Android P will be the first Google operating system release to include the water pistol / squirt gun design for all apps. ↩︎

Emojiology: 😭 Loudly Crying Face

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Emojiology: 😭 Loudly Crying Face

We use emojis to help us express emotions, but sometimes it’s the emojis themselves that bring them on. Exhibit A: 😭.

Social media manager Jasmyn Lawson ignited a Twitter debate last year when she proposed some guidelines for crying emojis:

The replies were heated and divided. Some crowed agreement that 😭 is downright inappropriate for condolences, as it howls with laughter—not tears. Others recoiled at the very thought, prescribing the emoji’s official name, Loudly Crying Face, as its one true meaning.

One astute emoji enthusiast, @fortgeorgie, noted that the appearance of 😭 Loudly Crying Face varies by platform and observed: “It’s all about actual usage not the generic names.”

We here at Emojipedia couldn’t agree more and voiced as much in the great 😭 debate:

Our passions now excited, let’s lower the temperature with some cool-headed, deep-breathing emojiology of 😭 Loudly Crying Face.

🔤 Meaning

😭 Loudly Crying Face conveys uncontrollable feelings and overwhelming sentiments, ranging from grief and disappointment to hilarity and joy. Its tone is often meant to be hyperbolic.

The emoji is not to be confused with 😂 Face With Tears of Joy, though it frequently gets paired with it and is used for the same effect.

💬 Development

😭 Loudly Crying Face is one of the originals, with roots in Japanese cellular carriers back in 1999. It came into wide release under Unicode 6.0 in 2010.

Since then, 😭 Loudly Crying Face has become one of the most popular emojis, far outstripping its blue brethren, including its neighbor on the Apple keyboard, 😢 Crying Face.

In 2015, 😢 Crying Face ranked as the third most used emoji on Twitter, outpaced by the uncatchable No. 1 😂 Face With Tears of Joy and No. 2 ❤️ Red Heart. It clinched another impressive bronze in 2017 on Apple devices, again looking up to 😂 Face With Tears of Joy and ❤️ Red Heart on the podium.

On most platforms, the not-so-smiling smiley 😭 Loudly Crying Face is yellow-faced and open-mouthed, as if inconsolably bawling or sobbing—two other common names it goes by. Down its cheeks rush two heavy streams of tears, which collect into a pitiful pool on the likes of Twitter and Facebook.

Emojiology: 😭 Loudly Crying Face
Above: The Loudly Crying Face emoji is becoming increasingly similar across platforms, with two streams of tears running down its face. HTC and LG stick with teardrops and Mozilla opts for a blue face.

There are some notable exceptions, though. On HTC and LG, 😭 Loudly Crying Face features squinting eyes shedding two teardrops. Perhaps the tech companies will take a cue from Samsung and Google, who've brought their versions of the emoji in line with Apple’s twin cascades in recent updates.

Emojiology: 😭 Loudly Crying Face
Above (left to right): The Loudly Crying Face emoji on Google Android 7.0, Google Android 8.1, Samsung TouchWiz 7.1, and Samsung Experience 9.1.

Mozilla, as ever, is the outlier among major vendors, its 😭 Loudly Crying Face shedding a single tear from a blue face, a convention it uses for other sad or stressed-out smileys.

While Apple’s emoji-craft so often leads the way, perhaps its 😭 Loudly Crying Face is the odd smiley out this time, which might help explain why it is so popular among its users—and confusing to others.

To the casual viewer, Apple’s 😭 Loudly Crying Face has eyes that are nearly identical to 😂 Face With Tears of Joy. If you zoom in, you'll notice that the eyebrows of 😭 Loudly Crying Face are a hair thicker and closer to the eyes, which are slightly nearer and higher up on the face. The result accentuates the waterworks but also reduces the impact of the wailing mouth. The result also yields a 😭 Loudly Crying Face that looks a little less upset than its counterparts on other platforms.

Emojiology: 😭 Loudly Crying Face
Above: At a glance, the eyes of Apple's Face With Tears of Joy emoji (left) appear the same as those of its Loudly Crying Face (right), but a closer inspection reveals subtle and important differences.

Apple's design makes 😭 Loudly Crying Face available not only as a more intensive form of 😢 Crying Face, as apparently intended, but of 😂 Face With Tears of Joy as well. It's sobbing is, just not necessarily with grief but with gratitude, pride, love, excitement—with tears of, well, joy.

As one keen-eyed commenter distilled the essential conflict in Lawson’s controversial tweet:

Two other forces may be at work, however.

The first is something we’ll call the reaction treadmill. In emoji-dom, 😂 Face With Tears of Joy holds court as a go-to and baseline for marking something as funny or enjoyable, keeping us running to ever more heightened and expressive ways to register strong feelings, like 😭 Loudly Crying Face.

The second is that we generally favor emojis with positive emotional content. The digital realm can be a dark and nasty place, no doubt, but the data show that in our Snaps and Instas, our WhatsApps and iMessages, we like love and laughter.

To wit, 😍 Smiling Face With Heart Eyes and 😘 Face Blowing a Kiss rounded out Apple’s 2017 Top Five. Besides 😭 Loudly Crying Face, the only other emojis with surface-level negativity in the Top Ten were 💀 Skull and 😩 Weary Face—whose application joins 😭 Loudly Crying Face in skewing towards the sarcastic or dramatic.

✅ Examples

In use, 😭 Loudly Crying Face cranks the emotions up to 11, feeling all the feels. This can include being overjoyed at accomplishments:

Being moved to tears by a beautiful wedding:

Or when we just can’t handle our fandom:

The swell of gratitude and humility can overtake us with 😭 Loudly Crying Face:

So, too, the power of love:

And babies:

And pizza:

Sometimes we turn on the faucets of 😭 Loudly Crying Face when we’re feeling run down:

Or utterly stumped:

Very often, as noted, we use 😭 Loudly Crying Face when something puts us in stitches:

Finally, for as much as Jasmyn Lawson is right that 😭 Loudly Crying Face can be out of place in serious contexts, the emoji still has a more somber and serious side. It can help convey the sadness of missing a loved one, losing a dear pet, or learning horrible news:

Missing them already #😭

A post shared by Catherine Goico (@cathygoico) on

🗒️ Usage Notes

Whether using or interpreting 😭 Loudly Crying Face, be mindful that it's an actor with incredible range on the emoji stage, capable of comedy, tragedy, and a whole lot of melodrama. But whatever the genre, the emoji wants to make sure its voice can be heard at the back of the theater—it is named Loudly Crying Face after all.

There's just no sense in scripting or typecasting what 😭 Loudly Crying Face is loudly crying about.

Google Emoji Boss Jennifer Daniel

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Google Emoji Boss Jennifer Daniel

In this month's Emoji Wrap podcast Google's Jennifer Daniel laments the lack of a sweaty heart emoji.

Every month I send a newsletter containing topics in the wider world of emoji and I like to discuss them with a guest in the emoji industry. This month I spoke to Jennier "no title please" Daniel from Google. Take a listen:

Subscribe using your preferred podcast app so you get the next episode automatically:

Facebook Reveals Most and Least Used Emojis

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Facebook Reveals Most and Least Used Emojis

With World Emoji Day fast approaching on July 17, Facebook has taken the opportunity to look at how emojis are being used on Facebook and Messenger platforms.

Facebook Reveals Most and Least Used Emojis

Starting with the most popular emojis, these include the obvious 😂 Face With Tears of Joy and 😍 Smiling Face With Heart-Eyes (popular on all platforms), but the addition of the 🎂 Birthday Cake does hint at one common theme on Facebook.

Facebook Reveals Most and Least Used Emojis
Above: Most popular emojis used on Facebook and Messenger. Image: Facebook.

Breaking down the top emojis by country reveals Australia and Canada to be the most keen on birthday greetings.

Facebook Reveals Most and Least Used Emojis

“Some”[1] of the least used emojis listed include 🤽 Person Playing Water Polo, 🕴️ Man in Suit Levitating and 1️⃣ Keycap Digit One.

Facebook Reveals Most and Least Used Emojis
Above: Some of the least used emojis on Facebook. Image: Facebook.

As of Emoji 11.0 there are 2,823 emojis approved by Unicode. Facebook doesn't (yet) support this year's emoji update so that leaves 2,666 available for use on the platform.[2]

Rounding out the statistics are some raw numbers on emoji use. I'd have liked to see these in context (what percentage of messages sent on Messenger contain only emojis without other text), but nonetheless having nearly 1 billion emoji-only messages sent each day is a staggering number for a character set that wasn't universally exchangable until 2010.

Facebook Reveals Most and Least Used Emojis


  1. I put “some” in quotes as it seems likely these have been chosen to present some of the more interesting yet lesser-used emojis. I would imagine that if Keycap #1 is shown as least-used, so would the other keycaps. ↩︎

  2. Plus some bonus non-standard emoji additions such as 🕴️‍♀️ Woman in Business Suit Levitating and more diverse family emojis. ↩︎

World Emoji Day 2018: First Look at Apple's New Emojis

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World Emoji Day 2018: First Look at Apple's New Emojis

To celebrate World Emoji Day on July 17[1] Apple has today offered a first look at the iOS emojis for 2018. We spoke to Apple VP of User Interface Design Alan Dye about the new emoji updates and when we can expect them.

Popular additions coming soon to iOS include redheads, a mango, kangaroo and lobster. Billing the update as over 70 new emojis, the total number should total closer to 150 additions when gender and skin tones are taken into account.

World Emoji Day 2018: First Look at Apple's New Emojis
Above: “Over 70” new emojis are coming to iOS later this year. Images: Apple / Emojipedia composite.

Of the new smiley faces on the way, one in particular seems a likely crowd-favorite and that is the Smiling Face With Smiling Eyes and Three Hearts. This joins Partying Face, Pleading Face, and Cold Face among the new smileys previewed today.

Other new smileys added as part of Emoji 11.0 but not previewed today include Hot Face and Woozy Face. These are likely to arrive in the same update as the designs previewed here.

World Emoji Day 2018: First Look at Apple's New Emojis
Above: New smileys coming to iOS this year. Image: Apple / Emojipedia composite.

Apple emoji designs tend to be the most visible and well-known compared to other platforms which is likely due to the broad support for iOS updates across Apple's lineup, as well as earlier support for color emoji than other operating systems.

Vice President of User Interface Design Alan Dye oversees Apple's new emoji designs and I asked him about the design process. When starting with a clean-slate, how does Apple decide which direction to go for each emoji? For instance the T-Rex emoji in 2017 could have been realistic, or cute. What's the logic behind which designs aim for realism, or which are cute? Dye:

“I wish I could say that there was a math behind all that but there really isn’t. We’re looking for what is the most iconic, the most usable the most timeless representation of that emoji that we’re designing.”

Noting that these emojis are a quite a visible part of the operating system, Dye added: “without a doubt we want it to always feel like an Apple emoji and that’s what we’re going for, but we really make that decision on a case by case basis.”

Some of Apple's new emojis this year look how one might expect. The designs of the new redhead emojis (which Dye calls out as likely to be one of the more popular) would be instantly familiar to those familiar with the existing emojis for women and men:

World Emoji Day 2018: First Look at Apple's New Emojis
Above: New redheaded emoji options coming to iOS. Image: Apple / Emojipedia composite.

One of Emojipedia's most frequent requests from users is that vendors like Apple add emojis for black families. Are families with more diverse skin tones in the future for Apple?

Asked about this, Dye notes that the team “talk about it all the time” but consider it a challenge to come up with an appropriate interface. Calling out the user-interface as one of the main concerns: “I just think that you need a UI that can accommodate the variations”.

In the meantime, new diverse options on the way include people with curly hair, gray (or white) hair, no hair (bald), as well as the aforementioned redheads.

World Emoji Day 2018: First Look at Apple's New Emojis
Above: New diverse emoji options coming to iOS in 2018. Image: Apple.

What else is on the way this year? A test tube emoji, ball of yarn, cupcake, and leafy-green vegetable have all been shown in Apple's World Emoji Day preview. These will likely join the llama, raccoon, hiking boot and broom - all of which are included in Emoji 11.0.

World Emoji Day 2018: First Look at Apple's New Emojis

Release

Apple has confirmed new emoji support coming to iOS “later this year”. In past years, emoji additions have generally been released in an update that follows the major iOS version of the year. For instance, iOS 11.1 was the update to include new emojis in 2017, released in late October.

Expect to see these new updates either in iOS 12 or a release such as iOS 12.1 or iOS 12.2 to follow it, later in 2018.

World Emoji Day 2018: First Look at Apple's New Emojis
Above: All of the new hair choices coming to the iOS emoji keyboard in 2018. Images: Apple / Emojipedia composite.

Related


  1. Yes, it's already World Emoji Day across the Asia-Pacific region of the world. ↩︎

Blowing Kiss Beats Heart-Eyes in New Google Stats

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Blowing Kiss Beats Heart-Eyes in New Google Stats

Google has today shared new statistics that show 😘 Face Blowing a Kiss beating out the 😍 Smiling Face With Heart-Eyes emoji.

It is World Emoji Day after all, and Google noted: “to celebrate this day with the global community, we took a look at some of the most popular emoji used on Gboard around the world”.

Rounding out the top five are ❤️ Red Heart in fourth place, 😊 Smiling Face With Smiling Eyes in fifth place, and of course 😂 Face With Tears of Joy in first place

Blowing Kiss Beats Heart-Eyes in New Google Stats

The interesting part of emoji analytics is that we all tend to use more similar emojis than one might think.

Rather than ranking the top emojis per language, Google looked at which emojis are more popular in various languages.

While the popularity of many of these emoji are common across different languages, we also found that some emoji are more uniquely used in certain languages over others, noting:

“For example, Italian and Russian speakers send each other kisses 💋 more frequently than speakers of other languages. And speakers of two languages from Southeast Asia are big fans of sunglasses 😎”

Blowing Kiss Beats Heart-Eyes in New Google Stats

Those two languages that use 😎 Smiling Face With Sunglasses more than any other? Thai and Vietnamese.

Blowing Kiss Beats Heart-Eyes in New Google Stats

Lastly, recognizing the ongoing mourning for Android's old blob emojis, Google is including more of the blobs in their downloadable animated sticker pack.

Blowing Kiss Beats Heart-Eyes in New Google Stats

“Just in time for World Emoji Day, we’re launching a new animated sticker pack today—on both Gboard and Android Messages—featuring Google’s lovable original “blob” emoji. The sticker pack has double the blobs of the original sticker pack, which ​launched​ on Allo last summer. Some favorites include the octopus, broken heart, the dancer, and many more.”

Emojiology: 😬 Grimacing Face

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Emojiology: 😬 Grimacing Face

You know something’s up when the dictionary is at a loss for words. “We’re gonna be honest with you,” an article on Dictionary.com admits. “Even the dictionary can have a hard time putting things into words 😬.”

What tongue-tied the dictionary? 😬.

That little teeth-clencher, officially known as 😬 Grimacing Face, hasn’t just stumped lexicographers. It’s also challenged its coders and designers and plenty of texters and tweeters, too—it’s really tricky, it turns out, to capture the complexities of facial expressions in emojis.

But relax your jaw. We have some fresh emojiology to help you figure it out.

🔤 Meaning

😬 Grimacing Face conveys a wide range of moderately negative emotions, including disapproval, discomfort, and disgust. It especially communicates tense feelings, including nervousness, embarrassment, ambivalence, and awkwardness, including on Snapchat, where the emoji displays next to a friend who sends the most messages to the same person you do.

Because its toothy mouth can resemble a grin from a distance, 😬 Grimacing Face is occasionally used to show—or confused for—excitement, laughter, or happiness.

💬 Development

Debuting under Unicode 6.1 in 2012, 😬 Grimacing Face is all about the mouth. Across platforms, the emoji depicts a yellow face with a rounded mouth baring gritted teeth. It’s the emoji embodiment of that cheek-stretching contortion of the countenance we call a grimace—hence its name, though sometimes 😬 answers to Awkward, Eek, Foot in Mouth, or Nervous emoji.

Emojiology: 😬 Grimacing Face
Above: As we've seen with Smiling Face With Heart-Eyes and Loudly Crying Face, the look of Grimacing Face emoji is converging across major platforms.

Most platforms, including Apple, Samsung, Facebook, and Twitter, outline the individual teeth of 😬 Grimacing Face, which emphasizes that they are clenched. EmojiOne and WhatsApp leave out that detail but still illustrate both rows of teeth pressed together. Either way, the emoji’s mouth helps make its small, dot-like eyes look pinched, pained, or peeved.

Before its release, Apple users were already familiar with the signature chompers of 😬 Grimacing Face: The vendor used that same shape in its original 😁 Beaming Face with Smiling Eyes starting in 2010. For many, though, the effect of Apple’s early 😁 Beaming Face with Smiling Eyes with Smiling Eyes fell somewhere between amusement and anxiety. Its mouth didn’t look quite like it was grinning. It looked like it was, well, grimacing—that, or like a little kid flashing her pearly whites to her parents to prove she brushed her teeth before bed.

Outside its name, the visual intent of Apple's 😁 Beaming Face with Smiling Eyes just wasn’t clear.

Emojiology: 😬 Grimacing Face
Above (left to right): Apple's Beaming Face With Smiling Eyes emoji between iPhone OS 2.2–iOS 6.0 (2008–16), Beaming Face With Smiling Eyes emoji on iOS 10.0 (2016–present), and Grimacing Face (2012–present). Note that the original Beaming Face With Smilings Eyes has the same mouth as Grimacing Face.

Wisely, Apple repurposed that mouth for 😬 Grimacing Face. With its release of iOS 10.0 in September 2016, it gave 😁 Beaming Face with Smiling Eyes a makeover, turning up its smile and smoothing out its teeth to make it look happier than its oft-conflated keyboard companion.

Other vendors, meanwhile, struggled to get early iterations of their 😬 Grimacing Face just right. On Android 4.4 and 5.0 between 2013–15, Google’s expression seemed to be scowling or glowering. On Windows 8.0–10.0 between 2012–16, Microsoft’s grimace looked more distressed or even whiney. And it’s hard to say just what Samsung was going for up to 2018, as its 😬 Grimacing Face appeared to be sucking on some sour candy. But, as part of a larger 2018 trend of emoji convergence, all three vendors brought their 😬 Grimacing Face in line with Apple’s round-lipped, lattice-toothed, dot-eyed expression.

Emojiology: 😬 Grimacing Face
Above: The changing expressions of Grimacing Face. The top, left to right, shows Google's Android 5.0 (2014) and Android 8.1 (2017). The middle, left to right, is Microsoft's Windows 10 (2015) and Windows 10 April 2018 Update. The bottom, left to right, is Samsung's baffling TouchWiz 7.1 (2016) and Experience 9.1 (2018).

But let's not lose sight of the big picture here. Over the course of hundreds of thousands of years, we humans developed astonishingly sophisticated abilities to form and interpret facial expressions that communicate subtle but distinct emotions. And think just how good—how instantaneously—we can read meaning from faces in the flesh. The task of replicating those facial expressions in code, like with 😬 Grimacing Face, can make one veritably 😬.

✅ Examples

So, what do we read in 😬? A whole lot of feels. Enough, in fact, to put those meaning-mavens at Dictionary.com to work trying to cover them all. Let’s sample some here.

😬 Grimacing Face can wince at another’s mistake or misfortune:

Or, embarrassed, cringe at our own:

The 😬 Grimacing Face can issue a grossed-out “Yikes!” or “Bleh!”:

Cry “Ouch!” in physical or psychological discomfort:

Or shout a disbelieving “Oh my!” or discomfited “Oh no!”:

But 😬 Grimacing Face isn’t all about uneasiness. Because of its toothy grin, it can also squeal an elated “Eee!” or exclaim a cheerful “Smile for the camera!”:

Not sure exactly how you’re feeling? Nervous but also excited? 😬 Grimacing Face is perfect for communicating those mixed feelings:

🗒️ Usage

That’s a lot of feels, indeed. But that’s a good thing, if you’ll remember from the emojiology we did on 😭 Loudly Crying Face.

Emoji, like the words, gestures, and objects they were created to represent, can and do have more than one meaning—they’re polysemous, to get all dictionary about it. And like grimaces in real life, 😬 Grimacing Face is versatile, though, as we've seen, most commonly grounded in some sense of mild tension or self-conscious unease.

Such emotional range has its pitfalls, of course, with misinterpretations causing some real-life grimaces of their own. But while imperfect, that range also has its advantages. Very often in our texts and tweets, we just can’t exactly put into words what we’re feeling. If only we had some sort of tool for that 🤔😬.


Windows 10 Previews Emoji 11.0 Support

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Windows 10 Previews Emoji 11.0 Support

Microsoft has today shown its latest emoji support for those signed up for Windows Insider builds.

Supporting all the new emojis approved as part of emoji 11.0, new additions include a foot, frisbee[1], swan, lobster, and skateboard.

This release also replaces the previous 🔫 Pistol emoji design with a water pistol / squirt gun as the company indicated would be the case back in April 2018.

Windows 10 Previews Emoji 11.0 Support
Above: A new green toy pistol design replaces the realistic weapon in the next Windows 10 release..

New smileys in this release include:

Windows 10 Previews Emoji 11.0 Support
Above: All six new smileys from Emoji 11.0 are included in the latest Windows 10 Insiders build.

As with all platforms supporting this emoji update, the new hair options include a woman and man with red hair, white hair, curly hair, and no hair.

Windows 10 Previews Emoji 11.0 Support
Above: New hair options coming soon to Windows 10.

The list of 157 new emojis for 2018 was published in February 2018 and approved alongside Unicode 11.0 in June.

Release

As with all Windows Insider builds, designs included in this release are subject to change prior to final release.

This update is rolling out now to Windows Insider users, and is expected in the coming months for all eligible Windows 10 users.


  1. Officially known as a flying disc due to the trademarked nature of the word "Frisbee" ↩︎

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

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Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

Google has begun rollout of their new OS update, Android 9.0, also known as Android Pie[1]. Contained within this release are Google’s Emoji 11.0 updates as well as numerous tweaks to existing emoji designs.

With the release of Android 9.0, Google is the second major vendor to provide support for the 157 new emojis featured within Emoji 11.0, following the Twemoji 11.0 release in June.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog
Above: Google’s designs for the six new smiley emojis from Emoji 11.0: 🥰 Smiling Face With 3 Hearts, 🥴 Woozy Face, 🥵 Hot Face, 🥶 Cold Face, 🥺 Pleading Face and 🥳 Partying Face.

As previewed during the testing period of Android P Beta 2, several noteworthy tweaks have been made to several emoji from earlier releases. These include the 🔫 Pistol changing to a toy squirt gun in a move expected to be echoed by all major vendors by the end of the year.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog
Above: From firearm to orange water pistol: Google’s new 🔫 Pistol emoji design.

As well as this, 👪 Family and 💑 Couple With Heart have been modified to display gender-inclusive designs, as opposed to sharing the imagery of the 👨‍👩‍👦 Family: Man, Woman, Boy and 👩‍❤️‍👨 Couple With Heart: Woman, Man emojis respectively.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

The 🐢 Turtle emoji is now more alert and appears to have regained some of its old amicability, the 🗡️ Dagger now glistens blue like Frodo's Sting, and the 🥗 Green Salad (somewhat controversially) no longer includes egg in its ingredients list, making it vegan-friendly.

All of these previous design changes have now officially been released with Android 9.0.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

New

The introduction of the 👨‍🦰 Red Haired Man and 👩‍🦰 Red Haired Woman emojis have easily been one of Emoji 11.0's most anticipated features. However, Emoji 11.0 also features people with curly hair, people with silver hair, and bald people.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog
Above: Google's four new hair style emoji designs for both men and women. Each support the five Fitzpatrick Scale skin tone modifiers.

These hair styles are created through combining either 👨 Man or 👩 Woman with one of four new "emoji component" code points in what is known as a ZWJ sequence. Unlike Twemoji, Google has opted to provide each of these components with stand-alone designs, as shown below.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog
Above: Google has given graphic representation to the new 🦰 Emoji Component Red Hair, 🦱 Emoji Component Curly Hair, 🦳 Emoji Component White Hair and 🦲 Emoji Component Bald code points.

Also included in Emoji 11.0 are the 🦸 Superhero and 🦹 Supervillain. In designing these emojis, Google has made some less-than-subtle nod to our world's two major comic book publishers.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog
Above: The man and woman variants of 🦸 Superhero and 🦹 Supervillain. All support skin tone modifiers, though the 🦹 Supervillain designs default to a ghastly white instead of the standard yellow.

Both 🦸‍♂️ Man Superhero and 🦸‍♀️ Woman Superhero show a hero jumping into action with a blue suit and flowing red cape, very reminiscent of DC's man (and women) of steel. Meanwhile, the 🦹‍♂️ Man Supervillain and 🦹‍♀️ Woman Supervillain pose with full-bodied evil intent while their shoulder pads feature adornments clearly inspired by the classic design of Marvel's Mr. Sinister.[2]

New animal and foodstuff emoji are always warmly welcomed. Emoji 11.0 features sixteen new emojis across these two categories.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog
Above: The ten new animal emoji from Emoji 11.0, including 🦘 Kangaroo and 🦞 Lobster. It's noteworthy that 🦡 Badger and 🦛 Hippopotamus are rendered as forward-facing heads, unlike their whole-bodied Twemoji 11.0 counterparts.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog
Above: The six new foodstuff emoji from Emoji 11.0, including 🥭 Mango and 🧁 Cupcake

Body parts, science objects and household paraphernalia are also featured alongside other more stand-alone additions such as the 🛹 Skateboard and the 🧿 Nazar Amulet).

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog
Above: A selection of Google's Emoji 11.0 designs.

Notable design choices present within the select above include 🦠 Microbe being represented as five of the tiny creatures as opposed to just one, 🧩 Jigsaw showing two jigsaw pieces and 🧱 Brick displaying an entire brick wall as opposed to a single block.

Changed

Several of the smiley face emojis have had subtle design changes in Android 9.0. Two that are worth highlighting here are 🤗 Hugging Face and 🙃 Upside-Down Face.

🤗 Hugging Face now has its hands facing outwards, which is how a majority of major vendors display this emoji. This is less hug-like, but more compatible with the common use as 'excited / jazz hands'.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

🙃 Upside-Down Face has had its gradient inverted to match those of the other smiley faces, as discussed on a recent episode of the Emoji Wrap podcast, featuring Google's Jennifer Daniel.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

🤨 Face With Raised Eyebrow now raises the opposite end of the right eyebrow.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

Other smileys with minor design changes include 😪 Sleepy Face (lowered eyebrows), 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face (wider grin), 🤥 Lying Face (longer nose) and 😱 Face Screaming in Fear (eyebrows removed).

🐕 Dog and 🐶 Dog Face has been tweaked with ears shortened, tongue lengthened, and their face rounded for all an overall more cute-and-pudgy look.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

🐪 Camel has a more proportionate head and hump.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

🦒 Giraffe now displays the full animal rather than just the head.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

🌝 Full Moon Face and 🌚 New Moon Face have been changed into astronomical versions of the 😏 Smirking Face, reflecting the sideways glance shown on iOS and WhatsApp.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

🌞 Sun With Face has a more subtle smile, somewhat akin to the 🙂 Slightly Smiling Face

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

🕶️ Sunglasses now appears with the same design as shown on 😎 Smiling Face With Sunglasses.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

💣 Bomb had its fuse tweaked, now appearing more obviously lit.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

🥓 Bacon is no longer a raw piece of bacon, and is instead shown cooked and therefore ready for human consumption.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

⚾️ Baseball has had its stitching increased in size to match the new 🥎 Softball emoji.

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

🏥 Hospital now shows an outlined red cross instead of a solid red cross[3]

Android 9.0 Emoji Changelog

Release

Android 9.0 is out now for those with eligible devices, with rollout continuing over the coming months.

As with all Android releases, this will only reach the subset of devices whose carriers and/or device-makers support the latest software updates. Additionally, Samsung devices use their own emoji font and therefore will not be eligible for this update.

Editor's note: It appears that some builds of Android 9.0 include only a subset of these changes. For users with these builds, the same updates may appear in a future release.


  1. 🥧 ↩︎

  2. This is similar to how the 👨‍🎤 Man Singer and 👩‍🎤 Woman Singer
    appear-like-but-not-as David Bowie across most vendors and, in the case of WhatsApp, Prince. ↩︎

  3. Perhaps related to the Red Cross and its known efforts to ensure this design isn't used for “general signs of ambulances, health care, first aid, the nursing or medical profession, or similar matters” ↩︎

Microsoft Emoji Team on Emoji Wrap

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Microsoft Emoji Team on Emoji Wrap

In this month's Emoji Wrap podcast Microsoft Fluent Design Team explains the Ninja Cat, why the Windows emoji designs have that solid thick outline, and what's included in the new emoji release.

Every month I send a newsletter containing topics in the wider world of emoji[1] and I like to discuss them with guests in the emoji industry. This month it was Judy Safran-Aasen and Mike LaJoie from Microsoft. Take a listen:

Subscribe using your preferred podcast app so you get the next episode automatically:


  1. Now sent to over 14,000 people. Sent no more than once a month, and your email is never used for any other reason at all. If you want to get the latest emoji news summary in your inbox, just enter your email here. ↩︎

Service Dog, Deaf Person, Couples added to 2019 Emoji List

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Service Dog, Deaf Person, Couples added to 2019 Emoji List

New emoji candidates including a service dog, deaf people, and mixed race couples were added to the draft emoji list for 2019 at the most recent Unicode Technical Committee meeting.

While these candidates aren't guaranteed entry into the Unicode Standard, this is a key step before the final emoji list is published in early 2019.

These new additions join previous candidates for Emoji 12.0 such as flamingo, ice cube, sloth, and waffle which are all in the shortlist for release in 2019.

Service Dog, Deaf Person, Couples added to 2019 Emoji List
Above: Shortlisted emojis for 2019. Images: Emojipedia Sample Image Collection.

Unicode today updated its draft candidate charts to include these new emojis. Regarding the changes, Unicode president Mark Davis told Emojipedia:

“Leading up to July, we'd already decided on the bulk of the candidates for 2019. We had a special focus on accessibility, and were working out how to do a last few accessibility emoji and how to handle mixed-skin-tone groups. In July, we further solidified the draft specification for Emoji 12.0, and added to the candidate list two new accessibility emoji and the 55 mixed-skin-tone couples.”

Service Dog, Deaf Person, Couples added to 2019 Emoji List
Above: Deaf Person and Service Dog are two new draft candidates for Emoji 12.0. Images: Apple.

In addition, provisional candidates for 2020 have been shortlisted, including a ninja, magic wand, mammoth, feather, and dodo.

Which couples are supported?

A new standing person emoji shortlisted for Unicode 12.0 is planned for use in the creation of new couple emojis.

When combined with gender and skin tone characters, a total of 55 new mixed race couple options would become available. The proposal for these additions notes that this would be “25 female-male + 15 male-male + 15 female-female” couples.

The resulting emojis would appear similarly to the existing people-holding-hands (👬 👫 👭) but with skin tone options applied to each person.

Service Dog, Deaf Person, Couples added to 2019 Emoji List
Above: A new "person standing" character is used for the creation of mixed race couple emojis. Images: Modification of Apple emoji designs. Left (Emojipedia); right (Aphee Messer).

Are mixed race families included?

Unicode already provides a way for vendors to support mixed-race families, should any wish to do so. These are supported on Windows, and a subset where all family members share a skin tone are also supported on Facebook.

As of Emoji 12.0, no new family combinations are listed by Unicode, potentially due to the number of combinations required when three or four family members are included.

Service Dog, Deaf Person, Couples added to 2019 Emoji List
Above: Mixed race families are possible within Unicode guidelines, but aren't part of Emoji 12.0. Image: Modification of Apple emoji designs (Emojipedia).

What about redheads? Mango?

Emoji 11.0 is the emoji list for 2018 which includes popular additions such as redheads, a mango, and kangaroo.

These new emojis are rolling out on a number of platforms right now (Twitter website, Android, Windows Insider builds), and Apple has noted they are coming to iOS “later this year”.

The additions listed today are for 2019 (and some early candidates for 2020).

Service Dog, Deaf Person, Couples added to 2019 Emoji List
Above: Redheads, mango and kangaroo were part of the 2018 emoji list, and are coming to phones this year. Images: Apple.

People in wheelchairs?

Apple proposed a slate of new accessibility emojis earlier in 2018, with some additions including a person with a probing cane, and person in a wheelchair.

Accepted for Unicode 12.0 were a separate probing cane, manual wheelchair, and motorized wheelchair. These could be used in ZWJ sequences in future - pairing woman, adult, or man emojis with the wheelchairs or cane to create a single emoji.

At the time of writing, the cane and wheelchairs have only been listed as objects in Emoji 12.0, and do not have sequences for people using these devices.

Service Dog, Deaf Person, Couples added to 2019 Emoji List
Above: Wheelchairs are new candidates for Emoji 12.0, with possibilities to include people using them in future. Images: Apple.

What's the difference between Emoji 12.0 and Unicode 12.0?

Unicode 12.0 includes every new emoji (and all the non-emoji characters) that requires a unique code point. Emoji 12.0 also lists sequences, such as those required for skin tones, gender, or in the case of Emoji 12.0 - the service dog (which is a ZWJ Sequence of 🐕 Dog and a new Safety Vest emoji).

In the past, Unicode and Emoji releases haven't always been in sync, but that changes in 2019. Mark Davis:

“This is a special release for us. We are shifting the schedule of the Unicode projects - the encoding, properties, CLDR language data, and ICU code - up by a quarter next year to align better with what the vendors need.”

One benefit of the move is that vendors will have more time between an emoji list being published, and the NoHem[1] “fall” schedule for most major OS updates.

When do these come out?

Today's candidate list is still a work in progress, but it isn't due for final release until 2019. Mark Davis, again:

“The list of emoji is nearing completion, but there is still the possibility of changes prior to public release in 2019 Q1.”

Don't let the January-March 2019[2] schedule fool you, any approved emoji additions aren't likely to hit phones until the second half of 2019. Most of us don't even have the 2018 updates, yet!


  1. Can we make NoHem for “Northern Hemisphere” a thing? ↩︎

  2. More likely to be March than January ↩︎

Emojiology: 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face

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Emojiology: 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face

In our Emojiology series so far, we’ve clarified the confusion of 😪 Sleepy Face, reconciled the conflicts of 😭 Loudly Crying Face, and unpacked the complexities of 😏 Smirking Face and 😬 Grimacing Face. But emojis, lest we forget, aren't all trouble and strife. They are fun and playful, too, like this bouncy buckaroo: 🤠.

So, giddy-up! This Emojiology is going out on the range of the 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face emoji.

🔤 Meaning

Depicting a smiley wearing a cowboy hat, 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face marks a wide range of content in country and Western culture, from music and movies to rodeos and ranching to Texas and El Norte. Thanks to the cowboy hat's popular associations with "yee-haw" exuberance and Wild West sheriffs, the emoji can also express whimsy, confidence, or adventure.

💬 Development

Called Face With Cowboy Hat by the Unicode Standard, 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face was approved under Unicode 9.0 in 2016, debuting with other expressive faces such as 🤣 Rolling on the Floor Laughing, 🤢 Nauseated Face, and the equal parts cheeky and creepy 🤡 Clown Face.

Emojiology: 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face
Above: Differences in the Cowboy Hat Face emoji across platforms come down to the style of smile and the hat. Google's hat, for instance, calls up Indiana Jones's fedora.

Across platforms, 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face features a grinning face sporting a high-crowned, wide-brimmed, brown-leather cowboy hat, suggesting the iconic Stetson of the 19th-century American frontier—though, for some, it doubles as the thrill-weathered fedora of Indiana Jones. Several vendors, including Apple, Samsung, and WhatsApp, repurpose for its face their 😃 Grinning Face With Big Eyes. Consistent with other changes in recent years, Google and Samsung have fashioned their 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face to more closely resemble Apple's design, shading the hat from a softer tan to a nuttier brown.

Emojiology: 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face
Above: For their Cowboy Hat Face emoji, major vendors like Apple (left) and Samsung (right) have simply put a cowboy hat on their Grinning Face With Big Eyes emoji.

It didn't take long for the root-tootin', sassafrasin', lassoin' 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face to capture the internet's imagination. Two notable memes emerged in summer 2017. The first was Twitter's Emoji Sherriff, the brainchild of comedian Brandon Wardell. In June 2017, Wardell tweet-constructed a sheriff whose head was the 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face, hands were the trigger-ready 👇 Backhand Index Pointing Down, feet were the cowboy boot-esque 👢 Woman's Boot, and whose body was 💯 Hundred Points. He captioned his creation (warning, adult content ahead): "Howdy, I'm the sheriff of sucking you off. im gon suck u off."

Wardell's absurd figure spawned counteless spin-offs on Twitter, with its body and bailiwick swapped out for other emoji. Some takes were just silly, others satirical, and yet others meta, snidely commenting on the state of emojis and memes themselves. That July, the meme even inspired an emoji bot, @emoji_sheriff, which cycles through the full lexicon of emojis for its law-enforcers.

July 2017 also saw the Sad Cowboy Emoji. A clever Facebooker built a "howdy family," photoshopping 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face's headwear onto other emoji, including 😡 Pouting Face, 🤔 Thinking Face, 😏 Smirking Face, and 😔 Penisve Face.

Like a sad, she-left-me-but-the-bottle-didn't country ballad, the 😔 Penisve Face version especially resonated online. Later in 2017 and early 2018, a few tweeters memorably used the image, by then nicknamed Sad Cowboy Emoji, to make some humourous observations for when you're feeling like you've been knocked out of the saddle.

For all the virality of 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face, though, its greatest success lies in its creativity and personality.

🤠 Cowboy Hat Face sees widespread use, of course, for all things more literally associated with cowboys, from Toby Keith to the Calgary Stampede, but users often stage colorful emoji hoedowns to do so. They paint evocative secnes by pairing 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face with the 🌵 Cactus, 🐎 Horse, 🐄 Cow, 🌽 Ear of Corn, 🔫 Pistol, and 🌇 Sunset emojis, among others.

But, true to its name, 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face all comes down to that hat. Hats are fun. Hats are irreverent. Hats are performative. As costumes, they let us escape ourselves and play at other characters. As symbols, they confer on us authorities – think of the power of a crown. Make that hat a cowboy's ten-gallon top and cap it on a big, eager smile, and the 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face lends itself to all sorts of idiosyncratic expressions, from the goofy cheer of a paint-the-town-red yee-haw to a gritty sort of take-charge, like a lone-star sheriff.

✅ Examples

Let's try to herd together, here, some of the many ways people use the 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face.

Fans of country music, cowboy boots, rodeos, horseback riding, and other staples of country-western life love 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face.

So do fans of the western-themed sports teams like the Dallas Cowboys or Oklahoma State University Cowboys and Cowgirls.

🤠 Cowboy Hat Face has strong regional identity, especially embraced by Texas. But much of cowboy culture is owed to the vaqueros of Northern Mexico, where many people sport the 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face with pride.

🤠 Cowboy Hat Face also has a national identity, with many at home, and more stereotypically abroad, associating the rugged individualism of the U. S. of A.

Cowboys loom large in the popular imagination, too, especially as romanticized on the screen or stage. Enter 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face.

🤠 Cowboy Hat Face hasn't forgotten its roots, though, still punctuating posts about actual cattle-ranching, agriculture, and rural living.

When 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face is done working, he knows how to unwind, apparently, marking hunky dudes and making sexual puns, i.e., "riding" and a little bedroom maneuver called the "Reverse Cowgirl."

Some instances of 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face channel the can-do spirit of the cowboy or its cowboy-hat-donning kin, the Old West sheriff, for when they're feeling tough, empowered, "like a boss."

Others channel simply channel the fun of the 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face Face's smile and hat for a little, giddy-up whimsy. Because hats and cowboys!

Finally, yet others don't see a cowboy 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face at all. They see the whip-slinging archaeologist Indiana Jones, and use 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face to convey a sense of exploration, daring, and adventure—and another dash of whimsy for good measure.

🗒️ Usage

As the examples make clear, 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face has quite the range. If you want to add some country flair of Western waggishness to your texts or social media posts, he's your guy. And unlike a semantically moodier 😏 Smirking Face or 😬 Grimacing Face, we might say 🤠 Cowboy Hat Face is a pretty, er, straight shooter. 🤠🐎🌇

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