To make small caps, type your words into a small caps generator, copy the result, and paste it into a bio, heading or label. The small caps generator turns lowercase letters into small capitals you can paste anywhere, free and with no sign-up.
That is the quick answer. Here is what small caps are for.
A quiet, designed look
Small caps are capital letters set at the height of lowercase ones. Typographers use them for things that should feel measured rather than shouted: section labels, acronyms, the opening words of a chapter, a refined heading. The effect is even and calm, which is why small caps read as designed rather than loud.
Most apps offer no small-caps option, so small-caps Unicode is the way to get the look in a bio or caption. The styled characters paste and keep their form.
How to make small caps
Step 1: Type your words
Enter your text in the small caps generator. The small-caps version appears as you type.
Step 2: Copy it
Tap to copy the result to your clipboard.
Step 3: Paste it
Drop it into a bio, a heading, a label or a post.
Small caps versus full caps and bold
It helps to know what small caps replace:
- Full capitals read as shouting and can feel aggressive in a bio or caption.
- Bold pulls the eye hard and is best for one key phrase.
- Small caps sit in between: noticeable and tidy, without the volume of either.
That makes them a good default for a label or a heading you want to feel considered.
A note on the missing letters
You may notice a letter or two stay in their normal form. Unicode simply has no small-capital version of a few letters, x being the usual one, so they are left as their nearest match. The word still reads correctly, and every small-caps tool handles it the same way.
As always, keep essential information in plain text for screen readers, and paste a sample where you intend to use it.
To compare with louder styles, see the bold text generator, or browse them all in the fancy text generator.