Wide Text Generator
Stretch text into w i d e v a p o r w a v e fullwidth characters — the aesthetic text look, copy-paste ready.
𝙼𝚊𝚔𝚎 𝚢𝚘𝚞𝚛 𝚠𝚘𝚛𝚍𝚜 𝚋𝚘𝚕𝚍𝚕𝚢 𝚢𝚘𝚞𝚛𝚜.
𝕄𝕒𝕜𝕖 𝕪𝕠𝕦𝕣 𝕨𝕠𝕣𝕕𝕤 𝕓𝕠𝕝𝕕𝕝𝕪 𝕪𝕠𝕦𝕣𝕤.
Make your words boldly yours.
What is wide text?
Wide text — also called fullwidth or vaporwave text — uses Unicode's fullwidth Latin block, where every character occupies the same width as a CJK ideograph. The result is a spaced-out, aesthetic look associated with vaporwave culture, retro internet art and the a e s t h e t i c meme.
Best practices
- Wide text is a vibe — use it for aesthetic bios, server names and short captions, not for anything people need to read quickly.
- Fullwidth characters take up roughly twice the horizontal space, so you'll hit character limits faster on platforms like Instagram (150-char bio).
- Pair wide text with minimal punctuation and lowercase for the full vaporwave effect.
- Heads-up: screen readers read fullwidth characters normally, but the visual spacing can confuse users with cognitive disabilities.
Try another style
Wide Text Generator FAQ
Related questions
The sub-questions readers ask next — answered, with where to go.
They're symbols, not fonts. A 'fancy font' generator doesn't change your typeface — it swaps each letter for a look-alike character from a different Unicode block (𝗮 is a different code point than a). Because the styling lives in the characters themselves, it travels with the text when you copy and paste, which is why it survives into Instagram or LinkedIn where real custom fonts don't. The trade-off is that the text is no longer plain letters, so treat it as decoration for short phrases, not body copy.
Try every style at onceThat's a missing-glyph fallback. When an app or older device doesn't have a glyph for a rarer Unicode style (some scripts and decorative blocks), it renders a box (▯) or question mark instead. Sans-serif bold and italic are the most widely supported; bold script, fraktur and double-struck are the most likely to break on older Android keyboards or low-end devices. Always preview on a phone before you post, and keep the safe styles for anything that matters.
Use the safe social stylesYes. Neither editor has a bold button because both are plain-text by design, but both render Unicode. Generate the bold text, copy it, and paste it straight into the bio field — the bold survives. Keep it to one emphasised phrase rather than a whole bold bio, since a wall of bold reads as shouting and is harder for screen readers. Links and @handles should stay in plain characters so they remain tappable.
Open the bold generatorBold Unicode (𝗯𝗼𝗹𝗱) is for emphasis and hooks — the first thing a reader's eye lands on. Italic Unicode (𝘪𝘵𝘢𝘭𝘪𝘤) signals nuance: titles, product names, quotes and wry asides. Both come in sans and serif variants, and there's a combined sans bold-italic for text that's both. The rule is the same for each: use them on a single word or phrase, never for full paragraphs, and never on links or hashtags.
Open the italic generatorExplore the topic cluster
A wider set of styles, formatters and guides on this topic.