Update April 2015: iOS 8.3 and OS X 10.10.3 have been released, and some of the emoji details have changed.
The pre-release versions of OS X 10.10.3 and iOS 8.3, released to developers today, feature a range of emoji updates by Apple. Changes include new emoji categorization, new country flags, updates to old artwork for a few select emojis, and support for racially diverse emojis.
Above: A sample of these emoji updates: new watch image, variety of skin tones, variable family units, and new country flags
Racial Diversity and Skin Tone Modifiers
Apple is taking advantage of the new emoji skin tone modifiers, recommended by the Unicode Consortium in November 2014.
A small arrow appears next to the characters that allow skin tone modification.
Clicking the arrow offers a choice of five different skin tones, in addition to the default (yellow) skin tone. Choices for skin tones include pale, cream white, moderate brown, dark brown, and black.
The skin tone chosen can affect other features, such as the hair color. For example, the lightest skin tone tends to display brown hair, while the second-lightest skin tone has blond hair.
Above: Boy, Girl, Man and Woman with the five natural skin tone choices shown.
The following emoji characters are strongly recommended by Unicode to be included in any skin tone modifier update. They are available for skin tone modification in iOS 8.3 and OS X 10.10.3:
- ๐ฆ Boy
- ๐ง Girl
- ๐จ Man
- ๐ฉ Woman
- ๐ด Older Man
- ๐ต Older Woman
- ๐ถ Baby
- ๐ฑ Person With Blond Hair
- ๐ผ Baby Angel
- ๐ธ Princess
- ๐ฒ Man With Gua Pi Mao
- ๐ณ Man With Turban
- ๐ฎ Police Officer
- ๐ท Construction Worker
- ๐ Guardsman
- ๐ฏ Woman With Bunny Ears
- ๐ Face With Ok Gesture
- ๐ Face With No Good Gesture
- ๐ Information Desk Person
- ๐ Happy Person Raising One Hand
- ๐ Face Massage
- ๐ Haircut
- ๐ฐ Bride With Veil
- ๐ Person With Pouting Face
- ๐ Person Frowning
- ๐ Person Bowing Deeply
Above: A sample of emojis using the dark brown (type 5) skin tone
As per the Unicode recommendations for these emojis, the default skin tone has changed from white, to a race-neutral yellow color. The white variations remain available through the skin tone picker.
Above: Default yellow skin used if no emoji modifier is applied
In addition to the above emojis, Apple is including a range of other characters (which are considered optional by Unicode) for skin tone modification.
These include hand gestures, and activities:
- ๐ Thumbs Up Sign
- ๐ Thumbs Down Sign
- ๐ Ok Hand Sign
- ๐ Fisted Hand Sign
- โ Raised Fist
- ๐ Waving Hand Sign
- โ Raised Hand
- ๐ Open Hands Sign
- ๐ White Up Pointing Backhand Index
- ๐ White Down Pointing Backhand Index
- ๐ White Right Pointing Backhand Index
- ๐ White Left Pointing Backhand Index
- ๐ Person Raising Both Hands In Celebration
- ๐ Person With Folded Hands
- ๐ Clapping Hands Sign
- ๐ช Flexed Biceps
- ๐ถ Pedestrian
- ๐ Runner
- ๐ Dancer
- ๐ Father Christmas
- ๐ Swimmer
- ๐ Surfer
- ๐ Bath
- ๐ต Mountain Bicyclist
- ๐ด Bicyclist
- ๐ Horse Racing
Family Choices
New to this update is a choice of family emojis.
Options for these family emojis include any variety of two adults (men, women, or mixed), with one, or two children (boys, girls, or mixed). This is an increase to the options available, as the previous family emoji displayed only two parents (male and female) and one (male) child.
New Flags
Japanese carriers originally included a somewhat arbitrary list of 10 country flags in their emoji selections. These have been the standard emoji flags available on most platforms until now.
This emoji update introduces 27 more country flags into its emoji picker.
- ๐ฆ๐บ Australia
- ๐ฆ๐น Austria
- ๐ง๐ช Belgium
- ๐ง๐ท Brazil
- ๐จ๐ฆ Canada
- ๐จ๐ฑ Chile
- ๐จ๐ด Colombia
- ๐ฉ๐ฐ Denmark
- ๐ซ๐ฎ Finland
- ๐ญ๐ฐ Hong Kong
- ๐ฎ๐ณ India
- ๐ฎ๐ฉ Indonesia
- ๐ฎ๐ช Ireland
- ๐ฎ๐ฑ Israel
- ๐ฒ๐ด Macau
- ๐ฒ๐พ Malaysia
- ๐ฒ๐ฝ Mexico
- ๐ณ๐ฑ Netherlands
- ๐ณ๐ฟ New Zealand
- ๐ณ๐ด Norway
- ๐ต๐ญ Philippines
- ๐ต๐ฑ Poland
- ๐ต๐น Portugal
- ๐ต๐ท Puerto Rico
- ๐ธ๐ฆ Saudi Arabia
- ๐ธ๐ฌ Singapore
- ๐ฟ๐ฆ South Africa
- ๐ธ๐ช Sweden
- ๐จ๐ญ Switzerland
- ๐น๐ท Turkey
- ๐ฆ๐ช United Arab Emirates
- ๐ป๐ณ Venezuela
Those boxes with two-letter codes above? These will appear as the correct country flag image on any platform that supports the new flags. This now includes Android 5.0, OS X 10.10.3 and iOS 8.3.
In addition to the flags shown in the emoji picker, Apple has implemented hundreds of new emoji flags, which can be found here to copy and paste, as they are not in the picker UI.
Above: all of the new emoji flags in Apple's latest update
Google released 209 new emoji flags in November 2014, which are available on Android 5.0 Lollipop. Microsoft has yet to make any country flag emojis available on Windows or Windows Phone.
Technology Images
To keep pace with new product releases, Apple has updated the watch, computer, and mobile phone emojis to represent the Apple Watch, iPhone 6, and current iMac.
Emoji Categories
Across various platforms, a range of groupings are used to categorize emoji characters. Most are similar, but none are the same.
Above: improved emoji selection palette in OS X 10.10.3
Apple uses five main categories in both iOS and OS X: People, Nature, Objects, Places, and Symbols. Emojipedia uses this same grouping for browsing.
Within these categories, there are some unusual choices, but most people have come to remember where their most used emojis are located.
Above: Emoji Categories in OS X 10.10.2
OS X 10.10.3 introduces three new categories: Food & Drinks, Celebration, and Activity. These mostly include characters previously in the People or Objects sections.
In addition to the new emoji categories, two existing ones are renamed and re-sorted: Travel & Places (mostly the same as the previous Places category), and Objects & Symbols (most existing symbols, plus objects that haven't been re-sorted into Food & Drink, or Celebration).
Above: New Emoji Categories in OS X 10.10.3
The sort-order for emojis within each section has also changed in a number of instances.
At this stage, there are no signs of the new Unicode 7.0 emojis being included in OS X 10.10.3, nor the Unicode 8.0 emoji candidates.