Back in the late 1990s, a young engineer at the Japanese phone company NTT Docomo, named Shigetaku Kurita, was working on what he thought was just another project — a series of icons that subscribers could use to quickly read information on the first mobile web services and to communicate with each other.
Kurita created a set of 176 icons called emoji, a combination of the Japanese words for picture — e — and character — moji.
The Museum of Modern Art in New York acquired the Kurita’s set for its permanent collection and consider it a modern language.
Originally, the screens on cellphones were cheaply made. They were just black and white and displayed only 50 symbols. Using words alone made it difficult to display information on weather, news, the movies, and all sorts of stuff.
Icons had been used throughout the Japan's history. Pictures serving as words, emoji, was nothing new to the Japanese culture.
DID YOU KNOW...'Emoji' Was Added as a Word to Oxford Dictionaries in 2013
The emoji craze was so popular in 2012 and 2013 that it was added as a real word in August 2013.
New Emojis Are Announced Regularly
New emojis are being added all the time. In 2017 the Unicode Consortium finalized 69 new ones including a vampire, a genie and a mermaid.
This year, 157 new emojis were added including a ball of yarn, a badger and bagels.
The "Face With Tears of Joy" Is Among The Most-used Emojis
According to Emoji Tracker it's the most popular emoji used on Twitter.
The red heart, the heart eyes face, and the pink hearts emojis fall in second, third, and fourth place, respectively, suggesting that people also really enjoy expressing their love for someone or something online.
There Are Now 2,666 Official Emoji.
The Unicode Consortium, the governing body that manages the official emoji keyboard, expanded its offerings dramatically in the last few years. New emoji take into consideration skin tone, gender selection, and professions.
The Museum of Modern Art owns the original emoji collection.
Before emojis, there were emoticons, facial expressions made with punctuation marks. The first emoticons appeared in an issue of Puck magazine, all the way back in 1881. The magazine published four “faces”—conveying joy, melancholy, indifference, and astonishment—and called them “typographical art.”
They were first used as a way of communicating emotions online in 1982. When it became difficult for people to tell the difference between jokes and serious posts on a Carnegie Mellon University digital message board, faculty member Scott Fahlman came up with a solution: Add the symbol :-) to denote humorous posts, and add the symbol :-( for serious ones.
In his announcement about this proposal, he even specified readers to “read it sideways.”
Kurita created a set of 176 icons called emoji, a combination of the Japanese words for picture — e — and character — moji.
The Museum of Modern Art in New York acquired the Kurita’s set for its permanent collection and consider it a modern language.
Originally, the screens on cellphones were cheaply made. They were just black and white and displayed only 50 symbols. Using words alone made it difficult to display information on weather, news, the movies, and all sorts of stuff.
Icons had been used throughout the Japan's history. Pictures serving as words, emoji, was nothing new to the Japanese culture.
DID YOU KNOW...'Emoji' Was Added as a Word to Oxford Dictionaries in 2013
The emoji craze was so popular in 2012 and 2013 that it was added as a real word in August 2013.
New Emojis Are Announced Regularly
New emojis are being added all the time. In 2017 the Unicode Consortium finalized 69 new ones including a vampire, a genie and a mermaid.
This year, 157 new emojis were added including a ball of yarn, a badger and bagels.
The "Face With Tears of Joy" Is Among The Most-used Emojis
According to Emoji Tracker it's the most popular emoji used on Twitter.
The red heart, the heart eyes face, and the pink hearts emojis fall in second, third, and fourth place, respectively, suggesting that people also really enjoy expressing their love for someone or something online.
There Are Now 2,666 Official Emoji.
The Unicode Consortium, the governing body that manages the official emoji keyboard, expanded its offerings dramatically in the last few years. New emoji take into consideration skin tone, gender selection, and professions.
The Museum of Modern Art owns the original emoji collection.
Before emojis, there were emoticons, facial expressions made with punctuation marks. The first emoticons appeared in an issue of Puck magazine, all the way back in 1881. The magazine published four “faces”—conveying joy, melancholy, indifference, and astonishment—and called them “typographical art.”
They were first used as a way of communicating emotions online in 1982. When it became difficult for people to tell the difference between jokes and serious posts on a Carnegie Mellon University digital message board, faculty member Scott Fahlman came up with a solution: Add the symbol :-) to denote humorous posts, and add the symbol :-( for serious ones.
In his announcement about this proposal, he even specified readers to “read it sideways.”