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📅 Origin Story · Founded 2025

The History of
The Unsent Project

How a single artistic question — "What would you say to your first love if you could say anything?" — became a global archive of over one million unsent messages.

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2025
Year founded
1M+
Submissions collected
10+
Years running
Colors of feeling

Where It All Began

Every project starts with a question. For The Unsent Project, that question was deceptively simple: What would you say to your first love if you could say anything — and they would never receive it?

Artist Rora Blue posed that question in 2015 and built a minimal submission form around it. The premise was deliberately stripped back: no profiles, no names, no social mechanics. Just a text field and a color picker. Write the message. Choose the color you associate with this person. Submit. Done.

What Rora Blue expected was a modest art project. What happened was something else entirely. Within its first year, submissions flooded in from people across the world — in dozens of languages, from every age group, from every kind of love and loss imaginable. The simple act of having somewhere to put the things you never said turned out to be something millions of people had been quietly waiting for.

"The question was simple. The response was a million people saying — finally, somewhere I can say the thing."

The Founder: Rora Blue

Behind every meaningful project is a person with a vision — and The Unsent Project is no different. Rora Blue is a multidisciplinary artist whose work sits at the intersection of color, emotion, and collective human experience.

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Rora Blue

Founder · Artist · Creator

Rora Blue built The Unsent Project not as a social network or a confessional app, but as an art piece — one where the submissions themselves are the medium. The decision to organize everything by color rather than date, popularity, or identity reflects a deeply considered artistic philosophy: emotion is not sequential. It doesn't trend. It has color.

The project is followed on social media as @theunsentproject, where Rora Blue shares selected submissions and updates, giving the archive a living, ongoing presence beyond the website.

What makes Rora Blue's approach distinctive is the restraint. The Unsent Project could have added features, gamified sharing, introduced profiles or reactions. It didn't. Every deliberate design choice — anonymous, colorful, minimal — serves the emotional core of the project. That discipline is what makes it work.

A Timeline of Growth & Milestones

From a small art experiment to a cultural phenomenon — here's how The Unsent Project grew over the years.

2015 — The Beginning

The Project Launches

Rora Blue launches The Unsent Project with a simple submission form. The concept: write what you never sent to your first love, choose a color, submit anonymously. The first wave of submissions arrives — raw, immediate, and unexpectedly resonant. The archive begins.

2016–2017 — Going Viral

The Internet Discovers It

The project spreads organically across Tumblr, Twitter, and Instagram. Thousands of submissions arrive in waves as people screenshot their favorite messages and share them. The color-based archive becomes a browsing experience unlike anything else — people spend hours reading through one color at a time. The project crosses 100,000 submissions.

2018–2019 — Cultural Recognition

Press Coverage & Exhibitions

The Unsent Project begins receiving serious press attention. Articles in lifestyle, art, and psychology publications explore why the project resonates so deeply. Physical exhibitions bring the archive to life — messages printed and displayed in large-scale installations, organized by color, filling gallery walls with the emotional weight of what was never said.

2020–2021 — The Pandemic Surge

A Million Unsent Things

During a period of global isolation, The Unsent Project experiences a significant surge in submissions. People locked indoors, separated from those they love, turn to the archive to process grief, longing, and connection. The project crosses one million submissions — a milestone that cements its place as one of the internet's most significant emotional archives. The @theunsentproject social account grows substantially.

2022–2024 — Steady Growth

Continuing to Grow, Every Day

The archive continues to grow daily with no signs of slowing. New generations discover it — for many teenagers and young adults, it becomes the first place they hear about on social media when they experience their first heartbreak. The project's decade-long consistency builds trust. It's not a trend. It's a fixture.

2026 — Present Day

Still Here. Still Growing.

Ten years after its founding, The Unsent Project remains one of the most emotionally significant platforms on the internet. The archive holds well over one million messages. New submissions arrive every day. The @theunsentproject social presence shares selected messages regularly. The project shows no signs of slowing — because people never stop having things they never said.

Unveiling Untold Stories: Why It Matters

The phrase "The Unsent Project unveiling untold stories" captures something real about what the archive has become. It's not just a collection of emotional text messages. It's a historical record — a documentation of how an entire generation (and several others) processed love, loss, longing, and the specific pain of things left unsaid.

Nothing like it has ever existed before. No other archive captures this exact slice of human emotional experience — the message written but never sent, the feeling held but never expressed, organized not by date or identity but by the color of feeling itself.

In that sense, The Unsent Project is doing something that historians and psychologists and novelists have always tried to do: preserving the interior emotional life of ordinary people at a specific moment in time. Except it keeps going. The record is still being written, one anonymous message at a time.

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Cultural Archive

Over a million documented expressions of love and loss from real people across a decade — a record that can't be replicated.

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Psychological Relevance

Referenced in discussions of expressive writing therapy, emotional processing, and the psychology of unexpressed feelings.

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Art That Scales

A rare example of participatory art that remained true to its vision while scaling to millions of contributors.

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Global Reach

Submissions in dozens of languages from every continent — proof that the experience of unspoken love is genuinely universal.

The Unsent Project Today — What's Latest

As of 2026, The Unsent Project remains active, growing, and culturally relevant. Here's what's happening with the project right now.

Archive

Still Accepting Submissions

The submission form is live and active. New messages are added to the archive daily. The project has never closed to submissions since its 2015 launch.

Social

@theunsentproject Is Active

The project's social media presence continues to share selected submissions. Following the account gives you a curated window into the archive's most resonant entries.

Community

New Generations Discovering It

Each year brings a new wave of people encountering The Unsent Project for the first time — often through social media shares of particularly moving messages.

Growth

The Archive Keeps Expanding

With over a million submissions already collected, the archive continues to grow. There is no sign of it slowing — because people never stop having things they never said.

"Ten years in, it's still the same simple form. Write the thing. Choose a color. Let it go. That's why it works."

You're Part of This History

Every submission adds to the archive. Every color chosen is a data point in the world's largest emotional record. Your message belongs here too.

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Frequently Asked Questions

When did The Unsent Project start?

The Unsent Project was started by artist Rora Blue in 2015. What began as a small personal art experiment grew organically into a global archive that crossed one million submissions during the pandemic years and continues growing today.

Who created The Unsent Project?

The Unsent Project was created by Rora Blue, a multidisciplinary artist interested in the intersection of color, emotion, and collective human experience. The project is also active on social media as @theunsentproject.

Why did Rora Blue start The Unsent Project?

Rora Blue created the project to explore what people would say to their first loves if consequence and reception were removed from the equation. The color element was added to capture the emotional dimension that language alone cannot convey — a key artistic decision that defines the project's identity.

What is "The Unsent Project unveiling untold stories"?

This describes the project's core purpose: surfacing the emotional truths that people carry but never express. The archive acts as a collective record of untold stories — messages that were felt, written, but never delivered. Together they form an extraordinary documentary of human love and loss.

How many messages are in The Unsent Project?

The archive has collected over one million anonymous submissions since its founding in 2015. New messages are added daily, and the archive continues to grow with no set limit or end date.

Has The Unsent Project been shown in exhibitions?

Yes. The project has been brought into physical exhibition contexts, with submissions printed and organized by color into large-scale installations. The visual impact of thousands of messages arranged by color gives the archive a presence that is striking even outside of a digital context.

The Bigger Picture

Ten years is a long time for anything on the internet to remain not just alive, but relevant. Most platforms of The Unsent Project's era have pivoted, sold, shut down, or been buried by algorithm changes. The Unsent Project has done none of those things. It just keeps accepting messages.

That staying power comes from something simple: it solves a real human problem. People have things they never said. They always will. And having somewhere honest and safe and anonymous to put those things — that need doesn't expire.

The history of The Unsent Project is still being written. Every day. One message at a time.

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