I always retain upper case chapter headings, but with the first sentence of the chapter, I use discretion. I am a sighted volunteer, so if I am working from the print book, I look at it and if it is what is called small caps, then I put it to regular print. If one letter is bolded and the rest is not, I make it all the same style so that the text readers do not pronounce it as two separate words (any change of style triggers a separation for speech and is improperly handled). If it truly is all upper case letters, I generally respected and retain it. If I am the scanner, the first thing I do in FineReader Pro is to remove any small caps, superscript, subscript, and underline in the advanced font choices. That avoids confusion for my proofreaders, or at least I hope so. Wink. Valerie On Nov 23, 2013, at 9:54 PM, Gary Petraccaro <garypet130@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I've gone both ways about this kind of thing. K1000 v.11 keeps caps as in > the book if the letters are the same size. If the first letter is a slightly > larger size however, it turns subsequent letters into lowercase. After a > while I quit worrying about it since I found that people were changing the > font sizes in any case. > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Aidee Campa > To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > Sent: Thursday, November 21, 2013 8:43 PM > Subject: [bksvol-discuss] proofreading question > > Hello All: > I was wondering if we’re allowed to change the occurrences where the first > line of the chapter is all captilized? > For example: CHAPTER ONE > > I FIRST SAW HIM … > Can we change something like that to > Chapter One > I first saw him … ? > Hope that wasn’t too confusing. > Also, how do I change the fonts and font sizes in Word 2010? When I try to > click on the “fonts” button thing, it doesn’t do anything. I am running JAWS > 14, so JAWS specific instructions would be greatly appreciated. > Thank you all for your help.