General “down” style
As a general rule, use capitalization sparingly. This is known as “down” style.
If you can lowercase a word without losing clarity in what the word refers to, you should lowercase the word.
Cornell University is a land-grant institution. The university has its main campus in Ithaca, New York.
The Atkinson Center for a Sustainable Future runs a grants program. The center announced its faculty fellows recently.
Martin Tang ’70 is a lifelong member of the Cornell University Board of Trustees. The trustee emeritus made a recent gift to name a welcome center for the university.
Overall use of sentence-case capitalization
Sentence-case capitalization (where the first letter is capitalized) is AAD’s recommended style for most headings, subheadings, and captions, especially for the Web. This style guide, for example, uses sentence-case capitalization.
Specific use of title-case capitalization for events
Title-case capitalization is reserved for events with proper names—where the first and last word is always capitalized along with any “important” words in between.
State of the University Address
International Spirit of Zinck’s Night
If the event is just a generic event without a proper name, lowercase it. For more related guidelines, see names of events.
Very rare use of all caps
All caps is used in very rare instances. For example, the text inside call-to-action buttons and navigation buttons on a web page are often all-capitalized for legibility and emphasis. In general, avoid using all caps.