Emoticons.
Joy, indifference, melancholy, and astonishment may sound like names for the seven dwarves that never made the final cut. But these four emotions formed the earliest known emoticons, as featured in an 1881 edition of Puck magazine.
However, emoticons only really came to prevalence 100 years later, when university staff proposed a few simple markers to make sure people could tell the difference between a joke and a serious incident on internal messenger boards. And so the :-) and :-( emoticons were born.
In 1998, the Japanese mobile internet provider i-mode developed the first set of emojis to represent emoticons, which Apple popularised in 2010 through iPhone support.
The rest, as they say, is 🏛️ ⚔️📖✏️.
Kaomoji.
Kaomoji combined ASCII code and Japanese typography to create a unique strain of emoticons that could be read vertically – sometimes called verticons in the west.
Kaomoji have a distinctly East Asian vibe. While western emojis were first used by American computer scientists, Kaomoji was created by Japanese manga and anime fans – and fit with the aesthetic of kawaii, or cuteness. ^_^
ASCII portraits
You’d be surprised what a few dots and dashes can do. These ASCII art pictures range from very basic collections of vertical and horizontal lines to highly detailed, shaded portraits full of emotion – offering a Monet-style Pointillist approach with the dots and dashes of the keyboard.