Cloud and sky text faces for chats, bios, and captions

Cloud Kaomoji

Copy cloud kaomoji and sky text faces for chats, bios, captions, and usernames.

Cloud Kaomoji copy and paste

182 text faces shown in All.

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Showing 200 cloud kaomoji text faces.

Cloud Kaomoji ASCII art

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

5 pieces
cloud ascii art6×15

Weather updates

Plain cloud, rain, and storm glyphs work as quick shorthand for the forecast without spelling out the mood.

Aesthetic bios and captions

Star-and-moon cloud combos frame usernames, headers, and photo captions with a soft, dreamy feel.

Dreamy or sleepy posts

Moon-paired cloud faces suit late-night thoughts, cozy moods, and half-asleep check-ins.

How to use cloud kaomoji

Weather chat

  • Open with the plain cloud glyph ⛆ when the forecast is just overcast
  • Switch to the rain glyph ☼⋆。°✩ for an actual gloomy or rainy update
  • Use the storm combo 🌀☁️⛈ for exaggerated, dramatic weather complaints

Aesthetic bio or profile

  • Frame a username or handle with a moon-and-cloud pair like ⋆。゚☁︎。⋆。 ゚☾ ゚。⋆
  • Use the labelled version ⋆。゚☁︎。Cloud⋆。゚☁︎。⋆ as a section header inside a longer bio
  • Try the bracket-wrapped cloud ˚₊‧꒰ა ☁︎ ໒꒱ ‧₊˚ for a softer, creature-like accent

Sleepy or dreamy captions

  • Pair moon and cloud symbols like ⋆⁺₊⋆ ☾ ⋆⁺₊⋆ ☁︎ for a calm, late-night post
  • Keep it minimal with a single star-topped cloud such as ☁︎๋࣭ ⭑
  • Close with a soft cat-bracket face like ૮꒰ ˶• ༝ •˶꒱ა ♡ for a cozy, drowsy tone

Dividers and section breaks

  • Use the mirrored cloud pair ☁︎・゚ ・゚·:。・゚゚・☁︎ to bracket a title or heading
  • Drop the plain glyph ☁︎ between short list items for light spacing
  • A quiet star-and-heart combo like ₊˚⊹♡ works as a subtler divider

Cloud Kaomoji message templates

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

Cloud Kaomoji meanings

☁︎

The plain cloud glyph on its own. Drop it into a sentence the way you would an emoji — after a weather comment, a daydream, or a line about feeling foggy-headed.

⋆。゚☁︎。⋆。 ゚☾ ゚。⋆

A drifting cluster of stars, a crescent moon, and a small cloud. Reads as a quiet night sky, good for late-night captions or a calm sign-off.

૮꒰ ˶• ༝ •˶꒱ა ♡

A cat-shaped bracket face wrapped in soft dots and a heart. Works as a cozy, half-asleep reaction rather than anything weather-related.

⋆⁺₊⋆ ☾ ⋆⁺₊⋆ ☁︎

Moon and cloud sitting side by side with matching star spacing on both ends. Balanced enough to use as a standalone divider between paragraphs.

🌀☁️⛈

Tornado, cloud, and storm symbols stacked together. Use it for chaotic, overwhelmed, or 'everything at once' moments rather than literal weather.

A single rain-shower glyph. Useful shorthand for a gloomy mood or an actual rain forecast without spelling either out.

☼⋆。°✩

Sun and sparkle pairing that reads as clearing skies. Pair it with a cloud glyph earlier in a message to suggest weather turning good.

⋆。゚☁︎。Cloud⋆。゚☁︎。⋆

The word 'Cloud' framed by matching star-and-cloud borders on each side. Works best as a header or section label rather than inline text.

₊˚⊹♡

A minimal star-and-heart combo with no explicit cloud or sky symbol. Its soft spacing still reads as 'aesthetic sky post' once it sits next to cloud emoji.

☁︎๋࣭ ⭑

A cloud glyph followed by a single star, tucked close together. Reads as a quick night-sky accent rather than a full scene.

˚₊‧꒰ა ☁︎ ໒꒱ ‧₊˚

A cloud glyph nested between two curved cat-tail brackets. The brackets add a playful, almost creature-like frame around the plain cloud.

sky⋆。°•☁︎

The word 'sky' spelled out ahead of a small cloud accent. Direct enough to use as a caption opener without extra symbols.

꒰◍ᐡᐤᐡ◍꒱

A round bracket face with fluffy paw-print eyes. Not cloud-specific on its own, but its softness matches the fluffy, drifting tone of a cloud post.

୧ ‧₊˚ ☁️⋅♡

A longer stack of stars, a cloud, and a heart headed by a small ornament mark. Best as an opening flourish rather than mid-sentence.

Related kaomoji

Keep browsing nearby text face collections.

Browse all kaomoji

Cloud 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 is why kaomoji have eyes, brackets, and decorations while emoticons mostly have a mouth.

The cloud glyph predates emoji weather icons

☁ has been part of Unicode's Miscellaneous Symbols block since the 1990s, long before the colorful ☁️ weather emoji were standardized. The plain glyph still renders as flat text on most systems unless a variation selector asks for the emoji version.

Sky-themed kaomoji borrow from many alphabets

The stars, dots, and cloud accents in aesthetic sky posts are rarely purpose-built. ⋆ is a math symbol, ࣪ is an Arabic diacritic, and ꒱ is a Yi syllable bracket. The community reassembles them by shape, not by original meaning.

Copying, not typing, is how most people use these

Almost nobody types a cloud kaomoji character by character. The format spread because it is easy to copy a finished face and paste it whole, which is also why longer decorated versions with multiple layered symbols became common.

What is cloud kaomoji?

Cloud kaomoji are text faces and symbol clusters built around ☁, ⛅, and related weather glyphs, plus soft star-and-moon decorations that read as a sky scene. They are plain Unicode text, not images, so they paste anywhere text is accepted.

How do I type a cloud kaomoji?

Copy any face from this page and paste it directly into your chat, bio, or caption. No special keyboard or font is required since every character is standard Unicode.

What does ☁︎ mean in a kaomoji?

☁︎ is the plain cloud glyph. On its own it can mean literal weather, a daydream, or a foggy, distracted mood, depending on the sentence around it.

Why do some cloud kaomoji use ⋆ and 。 instead of a cloud symbol?

Many aesthetic cloud posts skip the cloud glyph entirely and use stars, dots, and soft brackets to suggest a sky scene instead. The mood comes from the spacing and softness, not a literal cloud character.

Can I use cloud kaomoji as ASCII art?

Yes. A few entries on this page are multi-line ASCII or braille-style cloud art built from block characters. They keep their shape only if you paste them into a monospaced font.

Are cloud kaomoji the same as cloud emoji?

No. Emoji such as ☁️ are rendered as pictures by the platform. Kaomoji are typed text, so they always display in your device's current font and never change appearance between apps.

What is the difference between ☁ and ☁️?

Both are the same cloud character; the second includes an invisible variation selector that tells some platforms to render it as a colorful emoji instead of plain text. Either version works when pasted.

Can I combine cloud kaomoji with a moon or star kaomoji?

Yes. Many entries on this page already pair ☾, ✩, and ⋆ with a cloud glyph. You can also copy a plain cloud face and place it next to a separate moon or star kaomoji to build your own sky scene.

Do cloud kaomoji work on Instagram and TikTok bios?

Yes, as plain text they paste cleanly into bios, captions, and comments on both platforms, though very long ASCII art versions may get cut off by character limits.