Small Caps

by Ilene Strizver

Small caps are available for a select number of typefaces and allow you to bring distinction and sophistication to your work.

When designed for a text face, these shortened capital letterforms usually match the height of the shortest lowercase characters (commonly referred to as the x-height). However, small caps created for display designs vary considerably in height and are often taller than the x-height. Some display typefaces are all-cap designs (no lowercase at all) and have small caps in the lowercase positions.

Small Caps

Small Caps
Small caps for display designs vary in size and are often taller than the height of the lowercase letterforms.

Used frequently for setting title pages and page headings, small caps are often suitable for headlines, subheads and column headings. You’ll also find small caps in lead-ins for opening paragraphs, often following an initial cap. Small caps are a great alternative to all caps for abbreviations such as states (MA and OR), times (A.M. and P.M.), educational degrees (BA and BS) and acronyms (PC, UNIX). Unlike all-cap settings, small caps stand out nicely without disturbing the balance and color of lowercase copy, and they require less space than all caps.

It’s important to work with “true-drawn” small caps, which are available in actual small-cap fonts or as characters in their respective typeface families. True-drawn small caps are designed to blend with the weight, color and proportion of capital letters. In contrast, computer-generated versions or reduced caps are simply scaled-down caps, and they are usually too light and often too narrow. They lack essential design features such as adjustments to proportions, stroke weights, length of serifs and other details that contribute to the legibility and aesthetics of your work.

Small Caps
Small caps are usually drawn to blend with the weight, color and proportion of uppercase letters.

Small Caps True drawn small caps are superior to computer generated small caps or reduced caps as they are drawn to match the weight, color and proportion of the caps. Computer generated small caps are just reduced caps and therefore look too light and often too narrow.

 

Fonts with "true-drawn" Small Caps:

Albertina

Aldus

Apollo

Baskerville

ITC New Baskerville

Bell

Bembo

Bauer Bodoni

ITC Bodoni

Bulmer

New Caledonia

Adobe Caslon

Centaur

Centennial

ITC Cerigo

Charlotte

ITC Charter

Columbus

Dante

Didot

Diotima

Eaglefeather

Ehrhardt

ITC Elan

Electra

ITC Elysium

Fairfield

Figural

Fournier

Friz Quadrata

ITC Gama

Adobe Garamond

MT Garamond

Stempel Garamond

Garth Graphic

Gilgamesh

ITC Giovanni

ITC Golden Type

Imprint

ITC Jamille

MT Janson

Joanna

ITC Legacy Serif

LinoLetter

Manticore

ITC Mendoza

Minion

ITC Obelisk

ITC Officina Serif

Octavian

Old Style 7

ITC Pacella

Palatino

Paradigm

MT Pastonchi

Perpetua

Photina

Planet Serif

Plantagenet

Plantin

Pompei

MT Sabon

Spectrum

ITC Syndor

Throhand

Times New Roman

Truesdell

Utopia

Van Dijk

Walbaum

Gill Sans

Ocean Sans

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Editor’s Note: Ilene Strizver, founder of The Type Studio, is a typographic consultant, designer and writer specializing in all aspects of typographic communication. She conducts Gourmet Typography workshops internationally. Read more about typography in her latest literary effort, Type Rules! The designer's guide to professional typography, 3rd edition, published by Wiley & Sons, Inc. This article was commissioned and approved by Monotype Imaging Inc.