✦free-symbols
πŸ™˜

North West Pointing Vine Leaf Symbol

πŸ™˜ is a dingbats emoji showing a vine leaf pointing to the northwest.

U+1F658

πŸ™˜ is the β€œNorth West Pointing Vine Leaf” symbol from the Dingbats block. It’s useful when you want a small nature accent with a directional, ornamental feel. Copy it directly or use its Unicode/HTML forms in apps and web pages.

North West Pointing Vine Leaf Symbol Meaning

The πŸ™˜ β€œNorth West Pointing Vine Leaf” emoji depicts a vine leaf oriented toward the northwest. As a decorative dingbats symbol, it’s commonly used as a nature accentβ€”adding greenery, leaflike ornamentation, or a subtle flourish to text. Because it has an implied direction (northwest), it can also suggest movement, arrangement, or a corner/edge decoration in layout and UI mockups. It generally doesn’t carry a widely standardized cultural or technical meaning beyond its visual, ornamental use. In practice, people use it to enhance posts, labels, crafts descriptions, and design elements that need a lightweight botanical character.

Common uses

  • β€’Add a small botanical decoration to invitations, cards, and event text
  • β€’Accent product names or packaging copy for plant- or garden-themed items
  • β€’Use as a directional ornament in UI mockups and layout notes
  • β€’Include in social media captions to convey β€œgreen,” β€œgrown,” or β€œnature vibes”
  • β€’Label craft projects or templates with a leaf/charm symbol

Examples

πŸ™˜ North West Pointing Vine Leaf

  • πŸ™˜Meet me by the entrance πŸ™˜
  • πŸ™˜New batch of herbs today πŸ™˜πŸŒΏ
  • πŸ™˜Corner detail: vine accent πŸ™˜
  • πŸ™˜Handmade garden tags πŸ™˜
  • πŸ™˜Greenhouse updates πŸ™˜

Variations

Ready to copy

Technical codes

UnicodeU+1F658
HTML Entity🙘
HTML Code🙘
CSS\1F658

FAQ

What does πŸ™˜ mean?

πŸ™˜ means β€œNorth West Pointing Vine Leaf” and is primarily used as a decorative leaf/nature accent with a northwest orientation.

What is the Unicode for πŸ™˜?

Its Unicode code point is U+1F658.

How can I copy πŸ™˜ for use on websites?

You can copy the emoji directly, or use the HTML entity: 🙘.

Can I use πŸ™˜ in CSS or JavaScript?

Yes. CSS escape: \\1F658. JavaScript escape: \\u{1F658}.