✨ Text Decorators
Borders, brackets, and embellishments around your text.
150+ Unicode font styles for Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, Discord & gaming. Type, tap, copy — works everywhere.
Borders, brackets, and embellishments around your text.
Ever wonder how people get those stylish fonts in their Instagram bios, Discord usernames, or TikTok comments? They're not using special apps with custom fonts. They're using Unicode — the same character standard your browser already understands. This tool gives you access to over 150 font styles built from Unicode's Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols block, plus 30+ text decorators for borders, brackets, and embellishments.
Here's the thing that surprises most people: these aren't actually "fonts" in the traditional sense. Each style uses different Unicode code points that happen to look like bold, italic, script, double-struck, or monospace versions of regular letters. Because they're just Unicode characters, they copy and paste anywhere that supports Unicode text — social media, messaging apps, emails, you name it.
The decorator feature wraps your text with creative borders and symbols. Want your text framed in stars, surrounded by brackets, or decorated with arrows? Type your text once, and every decorator shows you the result instantly. One tap to copy whichever style catches your eye.
This tool generates fancy text entirely in your browser using JavaScript. There's no server-side rendering, no API call that sends your text somewhere, and no database recording what you've typed. The Unicode transformations are computed locally in real time as you type.
Your favorites are saved in your browser's localStorage — they never leave your device. If you clear your browser data, the favorites reset, but that's the tradeoff for not having accounts or cloud storage. Simple and private.
This happens when a device doesn't have a font installed that includes those particular Unicode characters. The Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols block (where most fancy text lives) is well-supported on modern iOS, Android, Windows 10+, and macOS. Older devices or certain Linux configurations may lack full coverage. The more common styles — bold, italic, script — tend to work almost everywhere. The more exotic ones (like Fraktur or double-struck) might not render on every platform.
For website headings and body content, yes — search engines may not interpret Unicode math symbols as regular text. "Hello" in bold Unicode isn't the same as the word "Hello" to Google's indexer. Use fancy text for social media profiles, usernames, and decorative purposes. For websites and content that needs to be searchable, stick with regular text styled with CSS.
Generally yes, but with caveats. Gmail and most modern email clients render Unicode characters correctly. Word processors like Google Docs handle them fine too. However, some email filters may flag messages with unusual Unicode as potential spam, and recipients using older email clients might see garbled text. For professional communications, it's safest to use sparingly — maybe a stylized name or section header rather than entire paragraphs.
These are Unicode characters from specialized blocks. If a device lacks the system font for those ranges, it shows empty boxes. Modern phones and computers handle most styles fine.
Risky. Gmail usually works. Outlook and corporate servers are unpredictable. For professional emails, stick to plain text. For marketing where you have tested rendering, it can help stand out.
Screen readers may interpret Unicode characters literally instead of reading the word. For accessible content (website headings, navigation), use regular text with CSS styling. Fancy text is best for decorative social media use.
Over 150 distinct styles, ranging from bold and italic variants to decorative scripts, circled letters, squared letters, double-struck math fonts, and regional symbol sets. New styles are added periodically. You can scroll through all of them at once to find the look that fits your needs.
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