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About Small Caps Generator

The Small Caps Generator converts your text to small capital letters using Unicode's phonetic and modifier letter characters. This creates a professional, typographically refined appearance — providing emphasis without the "shouting" feel of full capitals.

Unicode includes phonetic characters that look like uppercase letters but are rendered at lowercase height. This tool maps regular letters to their small-cap equivalents.

How to Use Small Caps Generator

  1. 1

    Type Your Text

    Enter the words you want in small-cap style

  2. 2

    Pick a Variant

    Choose small caps, superscript, or subscript output

  3. 3

    Review the Preview

    Confirm letters mapped correctly for your phrase

  4. 4

    Copy the Result

    Use the copy button for instant clipboard access

  5. 5

    Paste Where Needed

    Add to bios, headers, captions, or documents

Tips

  • Small caps work best for short headings and titles
  • Use for subtle emphasis that's more refined than all caps
  • Perfect for professional and elegant contexts
  • Combine with regular text for visual hierarchy

Frequently Asked Questions

Are all letters available in small caps?
Most letters have Unicode small cap equivalents, but some (like Q and X) may use similar-looking substitutes. The tool handles these automatically.
When should I use superscript vs subscript?
Superscript is used for exponents, ordinals (1ˢᵗ), and footnote markers. Subscript is used for chemical formulas (H₂O) and mathematical notation.
Will small caps look the same on all devices?
Most modern devices support these Unicode characters. The exact appearance may vary slightly based on the system font being used.
Is small caps more professional than all caps?
Generally yes — small caps provide emphasis without the aggressive feel of all capitals. They're commonly used in professional typography.
Does small caps work on mobile apps?
Most modern iOS and Android apps render Unicode small caps correctly. Test in your target app because some older clients substitute similar-looking letters.

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