Color and Black-and-White Apple color emoji fonts, and tools for working with them.
The code provided is for educational purposes only. Apple is a trademark of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries.
- Download the latest release of
AppleColorEmoji.ttf
at the Release Page - Copy
AppleColorEmoji.ttf
to~/.local/share/fonts
. - Rebuild the font cache with
fc-cache -f -v
. - Now you are set!
- Install Python 2, building
AppleColorEmoji.ttf
currently requires a Python 2.x wide build. - Install fonttools python package.
- On the command line, enter:
python -m pip install fonttools
- On the command line, enter:
- Install nototools python package.
- On the command line, enter:
python -m pip install https://github.com/googlefonts/nototools/archive/v0.2.1.tar.gz
, or clone a copy from https://github.com/googlei18n/nototools and either put it in your PYTHONPATH or usepython setup.py develop
('install' currently won't fully install all the data used by nototools).
- On the command line, enter:
- Install Optipng, Zopfli and Pngquant.
- On RedHat based systems, run
yum install optipng zopfli pngquant
- Or on Fedora, run
dnf install optipng zopfli pngquant
- If you're using Debian or Ubuntu, you may run
apt-get install optipng zopfli pngquant
at the command line.
- On RedHat based systems, run
- Clone the source repository from Github
- Open a terminal or console prompt, change to the directory where you cloned
apple-emoji-linux
, and typemake -j
to buildAppleColorEmoji.ttf
from source. - If you wish to install the built
AppleColorEmoji.ttf
to your system, executemake install
, - Then rebuild the your system font cache with
fc-cache -f -v
AppleColorEmoji uses the CBDT/CBLC color font format, which is supported by Android and Chrome/Chromium OS. Windows supports it starting with Windows 10 Anniversary Update in Chome and Edge. On macOS, only Chrome supports it, while on Linux it will support it with some fontconfig tweaking.
The assets provided in the repo are all those used to build the AppleColorEmoji
font. Note however that AppleColorEmoji often uses the same assets to represent
different character sequences-- notably, most gender-neutral characters or
sequences are represented using assets named after one of the gendered
sequences. This means that some sequences appear to be missing. Definitions of
the aliasing used appear in the emoji_aliases.txt
file.
Also note that the images in the font might differ from the original assets. In particular the flag images in the font are PNG images to which transforms have been applied to standardize the size and generate the wave and border shadow. We do not have SVG versions that reflect these transforms.
- Emoji fonts (under the fonts subdirectory) are under the SIL Open Font License, version 1.1.
- Tools and some image resources are under the Apache license, version 2.0.