Symbols, faces, and dividers for Carrd bio pages

Carrd Kaomoji

Copy carrd kaomoji, decorative symbols, and text faces for Carrd profile pages, link-in-bio sites, and Discord bios.

Carrd Kaomoji copy and paste

182 text faces shown in All.

Showing: All
Showing 200 carrd kaomoji text faces.

Carrd Kaomoji ASCII art

Multi-line text art. Paste into a monospace field so the alignment survives.

5 pieces
carrd ascii art7×37

Carrd bio pages

Small symbols and dividers break up a Carrd profile without needing a custom image, keeping the page fast and edit-friendly.

Link-in-bio sites

A single accent next to a link title reads as intentional styling rather than clutter on mobile-width link pages.

Discord and chat bios

The same symbols carried into a Carrd page also paste cleanly into a Discord about-me or status line.

Section dividers

Short glyphs and faces work as inline separators between sections of a Carrd page instead of a plain horizontal rule.

How to use carrd kaomoji

Carrd page header

  • Open the header with a single face like (๑ > ᴗ < ๑) instead of a plain title
  • Keep decoration to one glyph per line so the header stays readable on mobile
  • Close a header line with a heart such as ♡ rather than a period

Link list dividers

  • Use an arrow like ⤷ to connect a link title to a short description below it
  • A thin glyph such as ⟡ works as a spacer between unrelated link groups
  • Avoid stacking more than two symbols around one link title

Signature or footer mark

  • A whole small face like ᓚᘏᗢ reads as a personal signature at the page bottom
  • Pair it with a plain heart ♡ rather than another decorated glyph
  • Keep the footer mark consistent across every page you build

Discord bio line

  • Wing brackets like ʚїɞ wrap a username or pronoun line without adding a full face
  • A single dot mark such as .ᐟ works as a minimal line-ending flourish
  • Test on both desktop and mobile Discord before saving your final bio

Carrd Kaomoji message templates

Copy a whole message for chats, captions, and comments.

Carrd Kaomoji meanings

ਏਓ

A Gurmukhi letter pair repurposed purely for its rounded shape. Carries no literal meaning here; it reads as a small decorative mark at the top of a page.

( ˶°ㅁ°) !!

A wide-eyed, open-mouthed face. Reads as surprised or excited, useful as a reaction accent next to a Carrd link or announcement.

(๑ > ᴗ < ๑)

A closed, content smile. A safe, all-purpose face for a bio header since it survives most fonts without breaking.

An arrow that curves down and right. Used to visually connect a heading to the line beneath it, common in Carrd link lists.

.ᐟ

A single Canadian Aboriginal syllabics mark, borrowed only for its slim vertical shape. Works as the smallest possible line-ending flourish.

ʚїɞ

Wing-shaped brackets framing a stray letter. A popular one-glyph accent for wrapping a username or short label on a bio page.

ʚɞ

The same wing brackets without anything inside. Frequently placed around plain text to soften it, e.g. ʚ links ɞ.

A keyboard glyph, used literally to label a 'now typing' or contact section rather than as an expression.

✨﹒✦﹒♡

A row of small stars and a heart separated by dots. A compact divider that reads as tidy rather than busy.

𓏵

A single Egyptian-hieroglyph-style glyph, valued only for its narrow silhouette. Common as a spacer between nav links.

⸝⸝

A pair of small curved marks, often placed at both ends of a short phrase as a soft quotation-style frame.

A plain, unfilled heart. The most neutral affection symbol in the set, safe as a closing mark on almost any Carrd section.

꒰ᐢ. .ᐢ꒱

A rounded bracket pair with two small dots inside, read as a shy or blinking face. Softer than a full kaomoji, so it fits small link buttons.

ᓚᘏᗢ

A cat built from Canadian Aboriginal syllabics. A whole face on its own, popular as a signature mark at the bottom of a Carrd page.

(,,>ヮ<,,)

A grinning face with raised cheek marks. Reads as playful and energetic, a good fit for a hobbies or fun-facts section.

Related kaomoji

Keep browsing nearby text face collections.

Browse all kaomoji

Carrd Kaomoji — background

Kaomoji are read upright, emoticons sideways

Western emoticons such as :-) developed on early ASCII systems where tilting your head was the cheapest way to see a face. Japanese users had access to a far larger character set through JIS encodings, so their faces never needed rotating. That single difference explains why kaomoji have eyes, cheeks, and arms while emoticons mostly have a mouth.

The symbols are borrowed from other alphabets

Glyphs that look purpose-built for bio decoration are usually loaned from unrelated writing systems: rounded marks come from Canadian Aboriginal syllabics, narrow accents from Egyptian hieroglyph blocks, and stray letter shapes from Gurmukhi and other Indic scripts. Nobody designed them for Carrd; page builders simply found shapes that read as small and tidy.

Copying is the whole distribution mechanism

Carrd symbols spread with no central registry, no approval body, and no version numbers, unlike emoji which need a Unicode proposal. A glyph becomes a Carrd standard purely because enough page builders copied it from someone else's site.

Carrd pages favor single glyphs over full faces

Because Carrd link titles and headers are narrow on mobile, page builders lean toward short one- or two-character accents such as ♡ or ⮧ rather than long expressive faces, saving the longer kaomoji for footer signatures or about sections.

Rare characters are why some symbols break

A symbol renders only if the visitor's device ships a font covering every character in it. Older Android builds omit large parts of Unicode, so heavily layered accents can collapse into empty boxes on some readers' screens even though they copy correctly.

What is carrd kaomoji?

Carrd kaomoji are the small text faces, symbols, and dividers people paste into Carrd.co bio pages, link-in-bio sites, and Discord profiles to decorate section headings and links without using images.

How do I copy carrd kaomoji?

Tap any face or symbol on this page to copy it to your clipboard as plain text, then paste it directly into your Carrd text block or link title.

Do carrd kaomoji slow down my page?

No. These are ordinary Unicode text characters, not images, so they add no load time and work the same as typing a letter.

Why do some symbols show up as boxes on Carrd?

That means the visitor's device or browser font does not cover that character. It is a font-fallback issue on their end, not a broken paste. Simpler glyphs like ♡ or ⤷ avoid the problem almost entirely.

Can I use carrd kaomoji in Carrd link titles?

Yes, link and button titles accept plain text, so a short accent before or after the title works the same as in a text block. Keep it to one glyph so the title still fits on mobile.

What is the difference between carrd kaomoji and carrd symbols?

There is no hard line. Both terms describe the same pool of text faces, dividers, and decorative glyphs used on Carrd; 'kaomoji' leans toward faces like (๑ > ᴗ < ๑), while 'symbols' leans toward single accents like ♡ or 𓏵.

Do carrd kaomoji work in Discord bios too?

Yes. Anything that pastes cleanly into a Carrd text block also pastes cleanly into a Discord about-me field, since both accept plain Unicode text.

How many carrd kaomoji are on this page?

There are 200 faces, symbols, and dividers here, grouped into faces, symbols and accents, hearts, emoji combos, and short ascii art so you can jump to the style you need.

Why do some carrd symbols look like unrelated alphabets?

Creators borrow shapes from scripts such as Gurmukhi, Canadian Aboriginal syllabics, and Egyptian hieroglyphs purely because the glyph looks rounded or minimal, not because of what it means in that language.