FAQ
EmojiCopy FAQ
Common questions about the emoji copy tool
These answers explain how EmojiCopy handles search, categories, multiple selection, skin tone color controls, display types, accessibility and browser behavior. For deeper usage guidance, read the emoji copy guide, browse emoji categories, or start with common pages like red heart, fire and thumbs up.
How do I copy an emoji?
Search or browse, then press Copy on the emoji card. The emoji is copied as plain text, which works in messages, documents, social posts, email subjects and most text inputs. You can also open a detail page such as grinning face and copy from there.
How do I copy multiple emojis?
Select each emoji with the plus button. The selected emoji tray shows only the emojis you chose, then Copy selected copies the full sequence in the same order. For example, a launch sequence might combine rocket, sparkles and party popper.
Does color work on every emoji?
No. The color palette maps to Unicode skin tone modifiers, so it applies to supported people and hand emojis. Food, flags, animals, symbols and many face emojis keep their native platform colors.
What does sprite mode do?
Sprite mode displays emoji through Twemoji SVG artwork when a matching asset is available. It is useful for a consistent preview, but pasted output depends on whether the destination supports rich clipboard HTML.
What does web font mode do?
Web font mode previews emojis with the loaded emoji font stack. Plain text paste still uses the receiving app's emoji rendering, while some rich editors may preserve the copied HTML styling.
Why do emojis look different across devices?
Emoji characters are standardized as Unicode, but the artwork is supplied by platforms such as Apple, Google, Microsoft, Samsung and app-specific emoji sets. The same emoji can look slightly different while keeping the same code point.
Is EmojiCopy mobile friendly?
Yes. Search, category filters, copy buttons, selected emojis and controls are responsive for mobile and desktop browsers.
Are emojis accessible?
They can be, but context matters. Screen readers usually announce emoji names, so important information should also appear in text. Avoid long repeated emoji strings when readability matters.