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The origin story of the Wingdings font
The funny font from vintage Microsoft Word has an unbelievable past and great influence on today’s culture

Wingdings, the iconic font composed by… well, icons; became widely popular for being included in many Microsoft Word versions in the ’90s is quite intriguing. It has even been the subject of some conspiracy theories.
Why do we need a font exclusively composed of symbols, such as the Celtic cross, the Zodiac signs, and the star of David? Who came up with that idea? Do people really use it?
A little bit of History
Wingdings history ties back to the very beginning of printing. Printing was originally a manual process, that existed before typing. It involved setting every letter, word, line on every page manually and individually. It was a long and tedious process.

Therefore, setting a fancy text was a complex process. Creating detailed templates for fonts was time-consuming and expensive, so printers invented a shortcut: dingbats. Dingbats were reusable sets of symbols and special characters arranged in ornamental pieces to…