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Create eye-catching ASCII art and text banners with 10+ FIGlet fonts. Perfect for code comments, terminal splash screens, and README files. 100% client-side processing.
11/50 characters
Loading fonts...Type any text you want to convert into ASCII art
Select from 10+ FIGlet fonts or try the randomizer
Copy as plain text or formatted code comment
Choose from classic FIGlet fonts like Standard, Banner, Big, Small, and more artistic styles.
See your ASCII art update instantly as you type. No waiting, no page reloads.
Control character spacing with default, fitted, or full-width options to match your terminal or editor.
One-click copy formatted as code comments with proper syntax for JavaScript, Python, and more.
Monospace font preview and dark theme ensure your ASCII art looks exactly as it will in terminals.
All FIGlet rendering happens in your browser. No server processing, no data transmission, works offline.
ASCII art has been a creative form of digital expression since the early days of computing.
ASCII art emerged with early computer terminals that could only display text characters. Artists used letters, numbers, and symbols to create images, logos, and decorative banners in environments where graphics weren't possible.
FIGlet (Frank, Ian, and Glenn's Letters) was created in 1991 as a program to generate large ASCII text banners. It introduced font files (.flf) that defined character shapes, allowing artists to create custom typography. Today, FIGlet remains the standard for ASCII art generation.
Add eye-catching section headers to your source code. Makes navigating large files easier and adds personality to documentation.
Create professional startup banners for CLI tools and scripts. Perfect for greeting users when your app launches.
Make your GitHub/GitLab README stand out with stylized project titles and ASCII logos.
Display branding and version info in command-line applications with large, readable ASCII text.
Add visual separation to build logs and deployment scripts. Makes debugging output easier to scan.
Create memorable commit messages with ASCII art for major releases or milestones.
Show ASCII art when your server/service starts. Makes logs more readable and professional.
Share text-based art on Twitter, Discord, Reddit, and other platforms where plain text is the only option.
ASCII art works everywhere: terminals, text editors, logs, emails, and any monospace environment.
Just text characters. No images to host, no fonts to load, no rendering libraries needed.
Generate beautiful ASCII art in milliseconds. Switch fonts and see results immediately.
Captures the charm of early computing. Perfect for vintage-themed projects and hacker culture.
Bold fonts (Banner, Big) work best for short words (2-8 characters). Compact fonts (Small, Standard) are better for longer text and fit more content horizontally.
Use 'Fitted' width for compact terminal displays (80-character terminals). 'Full' width provides maximum spacing for large displays. 'Default' balances both.
When copying as code comment, the tool auto-detects your language and adds proper comment syntax. Works for JavaScript (//, /**/), Python (#), HTML (<!---->), and more.
Use ASCII art section headers in long log files or deployment scripts. It makes visual scanning much faster when debugging or reviewing output.