How EmojiEmoji
Mot japonais (絵文字) signifiant 'caractère image' — petits symboles graphiques utilisés dans la communication numérique pour exprimer des idées, des émotions et des objets. Fonts Work
Standard OpenTypeOpenType
Format de police développé par Microsoft et Adobe qui prend en charge le rendu des emoji en couleur grâce à plusieurs technologies de tables de couleurs. fonts store glyphs as monochrome vector outlines. Emoji fonts break this model completely — they need full-color, high-detail images at multiple sizes. Four different technical approaches have emerged to solve this problem, each with different trade-offs in quality, scalability, and platform compatibility.
The Core Challenge
A regular font glyph is a set of Bézier curves colored by the application. An emoji glyph needs:
- Full RGB (or RGBA) color information
- Multiple levels of detail at different sizes
- Complex compositions (e.g., skin tones, hair colors)
- Support for sequences of multiple code points
OpenType addresses this with four color font specifications, each stored in dedicated font tables.
COLR/CPALCOLR/CPAL (COLR)
Tables de polices couleur OpenType qui définissent les emoji comme des formes vectorielles superposées avec une palette de couleurs, utilisées par Windows et Chrome.: Layered Vector Glyphs
Used by: Segoe UI Emoji (Windows), Noto Color Emoji (recent versions), TwemojiTwemoji
Un ensemble d'emoji open source créé à l'origine par Twitter, fournissant des ressources emoji en SVG et PNG utilisables dans n'importe quel projet. Mozilla
COLR (Color Table) and CPAL (Color Palette Table) work together. A COLR glyph is composed of multiple layers, each a monochrome glyph from the font's regular outline table, filled with a color from the CPAL palette.
COLRv0 (Original)
The original COLR format (v0) supports flat fills only — no gradients, no composite modes.
Glyph "😀" decomposition in COLRv0:
Layer 1: circle_outline → color[0] = #FFCC33 (yellow)
Layer 2: eyes_outline → color[1] = #000000 (black)
Layer 3: smile_outline → color[2] = #000000 (black)
Layer 4: cheeks_outline → color[3] = #FF9966 (orange-pink)
COLRv1 (2021)
COLRv1 extends COLR with gradients, composite modes, variable fonts, and parametric color palettes. This enables:
- Smooth gradients (linear, radial, sweep)
- Blend modes (screen, multiply, etc.)
- Font variation axes (including color axes)
# Inspect a COLR font with fonttools
pip install fonttools
from fontTools.ttLib import TTFont
font = TTFont("NotoColorEmoji-Regular.ttf")
# Check for COLR table
if "COLR" in font:
colr = font["COLR"]
print(f"COLR version: {colr.version}")
# List glyphs with color definitions
if colr.version == 1:
for glyph_name in list(colr.table.BaseGlyphList.BaseGlyphPaintRecord)[:5]:
print(glyph_name)
Advantages of COLR
- Scalable: Vector-based, renders sharply at any size
- Small file size: Shares glyph outlines across variations
- Variable font compatible: Supports
wght,ital, and custom axes - COLRv1: Supported in Chrome 98+, Firefox 105+, macOS Ventura+
CBDT/CBLCCBDT/CBLC (CBDT)
Color Bitmap Data Table et Color Bitmap Location Table — tables OpenType pour intégrer des emoji en couleur au format bitmap dans les polices.: Bitmap Emoji
Used by: Noto Color Emoji (older versions), Android emoji font
CBDT (Color Bitmap Data Table) stores PNG or JPEG images directly in the font file. CBLC (Color Bitmap Location Table) provides an index of bitmap locations at different sizes.
CBLC structure:
Size 16×16 → offset → CBDT PNG data
Size 32×32 → offset → CBDT PNG data
Size 64×64 → offset → CBDT PNG data
Size 128×128 → offset → CBDT PNG data
Inspecting CBDT with fonttools
from fontTools.ttLib import TTFont
import io
from PIL import Image
font = TTFont("NotoColorEmoji.ttf")
# Extract the 128px bitmap for 😀
cblc = font["CBLC"]
cbdt = font["CBDT"]
# Find the glyph name for U+1F600
glyph_name = font.getBestCmap()[0x1F600] # "emoji_u1f600"
# Access strike data (128px size)
for strike in cblc.strikes:
if strike.bitmapSizeTable.ppemX == 128:
if glyph_name in strike.indexSubTables[0].names:
# Extract PNG bytes from CBDT
bitmap_data = cbdt.strikeData[strike][glyph_name]
img = Image.open(io.BytesIO(bitmap_data.data))
img.save("grinning_face_128.png")
break
Disadvantages of CBDT
- Large file size: Noto Color Emoji is ~10MB because it stores PNGs at multiple sizes
- Fixed resolution: Looks blurry at sizes not pre-baked into the font
- No variable font support: Cannot animate or vary parameters
sbix: Apple's Bitmap Approach
Used by: Apple Color Emoji (macOS, iOS)
The sbix (Standard Bitmap Graphics) table is Apple's proprietary format. It stores PNG (or TIFF, JPEG) images per glyph, per size strike, similar to CBDT but with Apple-specific extensions.
sbix strikes (Apple Color Emoji):
20px, 32px, 40px, 48px, 64px, 96px, 160px
Each size contains PNG data per emoji glyph
Apple Color Emoji is not publicly distributable (it is part of macOS/iOS). You can inspect it on a Mac:
# Location of Apple Color Emoji on macOS
ls /System/Library/Fonts/Apple\ Color\ Emoji.ttc
# Extract info with fonttools
python3 -c "
from fontTools.ttLib import TTFont
font = TTFont('/System/Library/Fonts/Apple Color Emoji.ttc', fontNumber=0)
if 'sbix' in font:
sbix = font['sbix']
print(f'sbix strikes: {[s.ppem for s in sbix.strikes]}')
print(f'Number of glyphs: {len(sbix.strikes[0].glyphs)}')
"
sbix Scalability
Apple augments sbix with vector outlines in the glyf table. The font renders the bitmap at small sizes and switches to a higher-resolution PNG at larger sizes. Some sbix glyphs also use dupe references to point to the same image in a different glyph.
SVG in OpenType
Used by: Older Firefox versions, some experimental fonts
The SVG table embeds SVG documents directly in the font, one per glyph or glyph range. This enables full SVG capabilities: gradients, filters, animations (in theory), and arbitrary paths.
from fontTools.ttLib import TTFont
font = TTFont("emoji-with-svg.ttf")
if "SVG " in font:
svg_table = font["SVG "]
for doc_list in svg_table.docList:
svg_data, start_glyph_id, end_glyph_id = doc_list
print(f"SVG for glyph IDs {start_glyph_id}–{end_glyph_id}")
print(svg_data[:200]) # Print first 200 chars of SVG
SVG Table Status
Browser support for SVG-in-OpenType has narrowed. Firefox dropped it in favor of COLRv1. It is still available for specialized print applications (InDesign, Illustrator) that render color fonts via SVG.
Font Format Comparison
| Format | Scale | File Size | Browser Support | Platform |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| COLRv0 | Vector | Small | Excellent | Windows, Linux, Web |
| COLRv1 | Vector + gradients | Small | Chrome 98+, Firefox 105+ | Windows, Linux, Web |
| CBDT/CBLC | Bitmap | Large (~10MB) | Good | Android, Web |
| sbix | Bitmap | Large | Safari, Chrome | macOS, iOS |
| SVG-OT | Vector | Medium | Limited | InDesign, legacy Firefox |
Color Font Rendering in CSS
Modern browsers support color fonts via CSS @font-face without special declarations. The browser automatically selects the best color table it supports:
@font-face {
font-family: "NotoColorEmoji";
src: url("/fonts/NotoColorEmoji-Regular.ttf") format("truetype");
}
.emoji-display {
font-family: "NotoColorEmoji", "Apple Color Emoji", "Segoe UI Emoji";
font-size: 32px;
/* No special color-font CSS needed */
}
For COLRv1 specifically, you can control the active palette with font-palette:
.emoji-dark {
font-palette: dark;
}
.emoji-custom {
font-palette: --my-palette;
}
@font-palette-values --my-palette {
font-family: "NotoColorEmoji";
base-palette: 0;
override-colors: 0 #ffcc00, 1 #ff6600;
}
Variable Color Fonts
COLRv1 enables a new class of fonts: variable color fonts, where color parameters can be animated or controlled by CSS:
@supports (font-variation-settings: "RNDM" 0) {
.animated-emoji {
animation: color-shift 2s infinite;
}
@keyframes color-shift {
from { font-variation-settings: "FILL" 0; }
to { font-variation-settings: "FILL" 1; }
}
}
The Bungee Color font and experimental emoji fonts from Google demonstrate this capability.
Practical Implications for Developers
- Bundle size: If embedding an emoji font in a web app, COLRv1 (Noto COLRv1) is significantly smaller than CBDT Noto (~2MB vsSélecteur de variante (VS)
Caractères Unicode (VS-15 U+FE0E et VS-16 U+FE0F) qui déterminent si un caractère s'affiche en présentation texte (monochrome) ou en présentation emoji (en couleur). ~10MB) - Rendering consistency: For cross-platform consistency, use a bundled web font rather than relying on OS system fonts
- Subsetting: Use
pyftsubset(fonttools) to extract only the emoji you need:
pyftsubset NotoColorEmoji.ttf \
--unicodes="U+1F600,U+1F601,U+1F602,U+1F604" \
--output-file="emoji-subset.ttf"
Explore More on EmojiFYI
- See how specific emoji render across platforms: Compare Tool
- Inspect emoji code point data: Sequence Analyzer
- Emoji font and rendering terminology: Glossary
- Access the emoji dataset: API Reference