Where did I find how to make a Name in all caps like below"

In my manuscript with quotes after the new Chapter # , I then put the name of the famous person who said the QUOTE in all caps.

Chapter 8

STARPLAYERS DIARY, STARDATE 2.5.3047 PK
"It is only by following your deepest instinct that you can lead a rich life, and if you let your fear of consequence prevent you from following your deepest instinct, then your life will be safe, expedient and thin.” --KATHARINE BUTLER HATHAWAY ( On my ms it doesn’t look like this. The first letter is sLIGHTLY TALLER than the other capital letters.

I have searched and searched and I can’t find where I made the font behave this way. I would, of course, like to use it on the other chapters. This is my example for the final draft. I can’t believe I can’t find it. I looked through the formatting part of the manual but couldn’t find anything. Just that this was Apple font and their usual set of usages. Of course, I’m 72 which might explain why I can’t find it again now that I am on the final draft of my scifi action adventure for YA.

I love Scrivener but I couldn’t take an online Scrivener course at the time and I have an old OS10.5 MacBook but I am now retired, on low income, and can’t really afford a new one. I was a 10.3 but my son jacked it up as much as he could.

CKR

These are referred to as “small caps” in the documentation. “All caps” is something as well, but that purely means all of the letters are capitals, LIKE SO.

The easiest approach is to just select the text and use the Format/Convert/ sub-menu to first fix the lettercase if necessary so it isn’t all caps, and then apply small caps resizing from that same sub-menu. This method produces a lower quality result, but if you aren’t handling the final publication design that is fine. If you are, you may wish to consider using a special small caps font that has been hand-crafted to look good this way. The problem with the scaling method is that capital letters in fonts are not designed to be shrunk down and used together in close proximity like that, so they end up feeling “spidery” and poorly kerned, against the larger versions of the same font set. A dedicated small caps font will tend to have a more solid and legible feel to it. But like I say, not something to worry about if this is an ms you’ll be handing in for publication. They’ll take care of that kind of stuff for you.