instafonts.io Open in urlscan Pro
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Submitted URL: http://instafonts.io/
Effective URL: https://instafonts.io/
Submission: On April 07 via api from US — Scanned from NL

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instafonts.io
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Type some text to begin

You can create a new font or edit the fonts included in this collection:
Edit Collection
Collection Name:


Collection Description:

Font List:

One font URL per line. You can also add a collection URL to include all the
fonts from that collection.
Sorting:
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Leave this setting as "Most-Used First" to automatically sort your fonts based
on how often they're used.
Password:

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existing collection that you created, then you must enter the password that was
used when you created the collection. Please don't reuse an important password
from a different website.
Save Collection
Need more fonts?
Design Your Own Fancy Fonts


FONTS & TEXT SYMBOLS

Welcome to InstaFonts.io! We have over 90 bio fonts for you to make your bio all
fancy like. You can copy and paste these text fonts and use them not just in
your Instagram bio, but all over the internet! They're particularly useful on
social media sites that don't allow you to format your text (e.g. bold, italics,
underline, etc.). Using some bold text to, for example, punctuate important
points in your post could help you draw readers attention to the important parts
(skimming is the new "reading" in the internet age). Stylish text fonts like
those of this website are also handy to just draw peoples' attention to your
post/tweet/etc. in the first place. Insta Fonts was primarily designed to bring
you fonts for your Instagram bio, but we hope you'll find it useful for other
purposes too!


HOW DOES THIS WORK?

Here's the short explanation: Your keyboard is hiding characters from you. Your
keyboard has only about 100 characters on it, but that's just because it can't
fit any more. There are actually tens of thousands of characters! No joke. There
were originally 128 characters (read about ASCII), but then Unicode was
introduced and that supports an unlimited number of characters. Each year the
Unicode standard grows to incorporate more characters - and emojis! That's
right, emojis are actually just textual characters! It would be perfectly
plausible to have a keyboard that had keys which were for emojis.
Okay, so there are a bunch more characters than the ones on your keyboard, but
how do we generate bold/italic/fancy text that can be copy-pasted away from this
site and into another one? Well, amongst these tens-of-thousands of other
characters are actually whole character sets that look similar to the alphabet
on your keyboard. Some of these character sets were added for mathematicians,
linguists, and other academics who wanted to be able to express their equations
and formulae in their emails to one another (emails didn't have formatting of
text, originally), and other character sets were introduced for countries that
required them to communicate (e.g. full-width latin characters to supplement the
full-width Japanese characters). So that's how we ended up with all these funky
text fonts. Of course, many of the above "fonts" aren't "proper" character sets
- they were put together into a set that sort of resembles an alphabet.
Okay, now on to the long explanation: The long explanation starts with an
international organisation called "Unicode". It's the organisation that handles
the international standards for converting numbers into textual characters.
Unicode was the solution to an increasingly important problem in the dawn of
computing and the internet: How does my computer communicate with another
computer on the other side of the world if that computer "speaks a different
language"? One of the most popular "languages" in the early 1980s (especially in
the USA) was ASCII - the American Standard Code for Information Interchange.
ASCII was (and still is) just a simple set of conversion rules to go from
numbers to characters. There were 128 characters in the original ASCII
specification - and that's because 128 is the largest number that can be
represented with 7 bits. But isn't it the case the computers tend to like groups
of 8 bits (i.e. a "byte")? Yep, but the 8th bit was used for code pages - that
is, the other 128 characters (128 + 128 = 256 = maximum number you can make from
8 bits) were used for domain-specific purposes. A business could use them for
their own special encoding, or a whole country could use them for non-latin
characters in their language. But there's lots of problems with this approach.
Firstly, many languages (e.g. Chinese) have way more than 128 characters.
Secondly, what if a person wants to be able to read/write a document that
includes characters from two different code pages? We need more characters!
And here comes Unicode to solve all our problems. In the early 1980s a bunch of
prominent computer scientists and engineers got together to try to solve this
increasingly annoying problem. They invented an encoding that was backwards
compatible with ASCII (an absolute must since no one wanted to re-write all
their documents and programs to handle a new encoding). So this means that
Unicode and the ASCII specifications are actually the exact same for the first
128 characters. Thus, a chain of Unicode-encoded numbers which represent the
letters of the Latin alphabet (or any other characters in the first 128) could
actually be read by a program that was designed to only read ASCII characters.
But if the Unicode text had other characters (outside of the 0-127 range), then
the ASCII-reader wouldn't understand it.
Okay, so how is this relevant to Instagram fonts? Well, Unicode was successful
in launching an international standard for encoding an indefinitely large set of
new characters. This meant that tens of thousands of new characters could be
introduced - for every language and purpose that anyone could desire (including
the modern-day needs of social media: emojis!). And this led to the introduction
of many characters that, either by mistake or design, resembled the normal
characters that you see on your keyboard. There are so many characters in
Unicode that more "fancy text fonts" are being "discovered" all the time. You
can simply browse through the Unicode characters and try to find interesting
characters which look a bit like alphanumeric characters and then build your own
"text font".


ARE THEY ACTUALLY "FONTS"?

Well, not really. A font (or really, a "Typeface") is something that gets
applied to regular characters like the ones you're reading right now. The font
"transforms" the "style" of the characters, but doesn't change the actual
characters at all. That's why you can't simply copy and paste the text you're
reading right now into a social media website and expect the font to be
"transferred" along with the characters. However, if you copy π–™π–π–Žπ–˜ π–™π–Šπ–π–™
then it will actually copy the "style" that those characters appear to have.
That's because, as explained previously, those fancy character are actually
separate characters rather than being the same characters with a particular
"style" applied. The characters "e" and "π–Š" are as different as "S" and "5".
They may appear similar, but they're completely different characters.
People also use InstaFonts to create ciphers and interesting name to symbols
generators for TikTok trends. You can use InstaFonts to swap characters for
fancy/aesthetic symbols.


WHICH FONTS WILL WORK IN MY BIO?

Instagram has blocked certain characters from appearing in bios, and so you may
find that some of these fonts don't work properly on Instagram. It's hard to
keep track of which fonts are working and which ones aren't at any particular
time, so we've included all of our fancy fonts and you can easily test them by
just attempting to put them in your bio and seeing if it works. The same goes
for if you're using these fancy fonts on Twitter, or Tumblr, or Amino, or
Discord, or absolutely anywhere else. Whether or not a font works will simply
depend on whether the developers of the platform have decided to ban the
characters of the font.


CAN I USE THESE FONTS ON OTHER SOCIAL NETWORKS?

Yes! You can use them on Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, Reddit, Amino, Discord,
Spectrum, WhatsApp, WeChat, YouTube, QQ, SnapChat, Skype, VKontakte (VK),
Pinterest, Taringa, and more! Basically, anywhere that you can publish text,
there's a decent change that you can use these stylish text fonts to spruce up
your posts. This site is called Insta Fonts simply because Instagram is one of
the most widely used social media platforms. As I've noted above, some sites
disallow certain Unicode characters, and so not all of these Unicode fonts will
work on all sites.


FEEDBACK

Got some feedback for the team? You can share it with us here. We'll do our best
to incorporate your suggestions into the website on the next update. Thanks for
visiting Insta Fonts!

Note: This homepage is actually just a place-holder. You'll soon be able to see
many more fonts - all designed by people like you using our fancy font maker! :)
Privacy Policy
Pv in Different Fonts | Krit in Different Fonts | Antoine in Different Fonts |
Sina in Different Fonts | Camile in Different Fonts | JAMAL in Different Fonts |
Darkness in Different Fonts | Color in Different Fonts | Yuma in Different Fonts
| Drika in Different Fonts | Alex in Different Fonts | Indy in Different Fonts |
Jay Shree Ram in Different Fonts | Whatever in Different Fonts | Come in
Different Fonts
Β Clear


Result
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