The hedcut — headshot engraving — is the WSJ's signature portrait form. Originally hand-drawn in ink, later produced by a small team of specialists trained in the house style, each hedcut is a stipple portrait of a named individual: business leaders, politicians, authors, subjects of major news stories. The style is immediately recognizable: black dots on a white field, no gray tones, careful attention to the fall of light on the face, a discipline that produces portraits that age well across decades of publication. For the You On AI Wiki, the hedcut is the reference aesthetic — not because every illustration is a portrait, but because the hedcut's discipline (monochrome, transparent background, accumulated effort visible in every mark) is the discipline that makes the filter-based rendering pipeline work.
The hedcut was introduced in 1979 when the WSJ needed a portrait style that could reproduce on newsprint without gray-tone halftones. The solution — pure black dots on white, varying in density to produce tonal illusion — turned out to have aesthetic qualities that transcended its technical origin. The portraits felt authoritative, archival, almost etched rather than printed. The style became so identified with the paper that when the WSJ briefly experimented with photographic portraits in the 2010s, readers objected, and hedcuts returned.
A hedcut artist produces perhaps a handful of portraits per week. The work is slow by any industrial standard, and the WSJ has periodically explored automation — first by tracing photographs, later by training machine-learning systems on the accumulated corpus. The automation has always underperformed the handwork. The failures are subtle: a photograph-traced hedcut looks mechanical where a hand-drawn one looks alive; an ML-generated hedcut has too-regular spacing where a hand-drawn one breathes. The discipline is imitable, the judgment is not.
For the wiki system, the hedcut functions as a north star. Illustrations do not need to be portraits and do not need to achieve WSJ-level technical execution, but they aspire to the hedcut's qualities: monochrome commitment, labor legible in the marks, subjects that sit up off the page with the dignity of attention. The CSS filter pipeline then carries these qualities into whatever ambient palette the reader inhabits, without the source asset ever losing its stipple character.
The hedcut's relationship to AI is complicated. The style resists generation — the specific marks, the specific rhythms — and yet the compositional decisions that precede the marks (which features to emphasize, which to subdue, what posture to use) are amenable to AI-assisted ideation. A practitioner using the wiki's tooling may prompt an AI for compositional options, select one, and then execute the stipple by hand or via a carefully constrained reproduction. The human labor is preserved where it matters; the AI assists where assistance does not compromise the final mark.
The hedcut was introduced by the Wall Street Journal under art director Kevin Sprouls in 1979 and has remained in continuous use ever since. Its influence on editorial illustration — and on systems like the You On AI Wiki's that draw from its aesthetic — is a case study in how a solution to a technical constraint can produce a durable visual language.
Technical origin, aesthetic destination. The hedcut solved a newsprint reproduction problem and produced a durable visual identity.
Automation underperforms. ML-generated hedcuts can imitate the surface but fail at the judgment the style actually requires.
Reference aesthetic. The wiki's illustration system aspires to hedcut qualities without requiring hedcut execution — monochrome, labor-legible, subject-respectful.
Durable across decades. Portraits drawn in 1985 and 2025 share a visual language, producing an archival quality rare in contemporary publishing.