Similar to what you find in print media, CSS allows you to style the first letter in a composition using a combination of two pseudo-classes. This used to be accomplished in older browsers by wrapping the first letter of a paragraph in <span>
tags, then styling the <span>
accordingly. Browser support for advanced pseudo-classes is much stronger today so it’s safe to do this with modern CSS and allow older browsers to fall back to no drop cap.
.post p:first-child:first-letter {
float: left;
font-size: 6em;
padding-right: .1em;
font-family: Dancing Script, serif;
line-height: .9;
color: firebrick;
}
Code language: CSS (css)
Notice a few things about the CSS:
- I’m targeting the first letter of the first paragraph inside an element with a class name of
.post
. This is very specific, but you can adjust it to your own context. - The key to the drop cap is the
float
property. When an element is floated it automatically becomes a block-level element, which is what we want here. - The font in this case is Dancing Script from Google Fonts (see demo below).
Here is a demo using the styles above:
If you’d like the first letter to be on the same baseline as the initial line, or if you’d like the letter to be in the left margin, this can be accomplished with some adjusted CSS, as shown in the code and below:
/* Same-line drop cap */
.post1 p:first-child:first-letter {
font-size: 6em;
padding-right: .1em;
font-family: Dancing Script, serif;
line-height: .8;
color: firebrick;
vertical-align: bottom;
}
/* left margin drop-cap */
.post2 p:first-child:first-letter {
float: left;
font-size: 6em;
margin-left: -.5em;
padding-right: .1em;
font-family: Calistoga, serif;
line-height: .8;
color: firebrick;
}
Code language: CSS (css)
Notice the use of the vertical-align
property in the first example, and no float. Also, the second example goes back to a float but moves the letter outside the margin. This might not work for all layouts.
It should also be noted that there is a pseudo-class called initial-letter
but browser support for it is very poor.